A network of clones, finding the highest win-wins between every pair of humans.
Imagine what would happen if you could talk to the entire world. Give them your life story, your goals, your needs, your wants, your wishes — then watch the conversations write themselves. The potential that would surface. The collaborations that would be born. The doors that would quietly open while you slept.
SyncedIn starts as a way for your digital twin to talk to one other person's twin and find a real win-win. The endgame is different. As more humans build clones, the clones start running conversations across the whole network in parallel, surfacing only the matches you actually care about and skipping the rest. The social graph becomes a hypernetwork of clones doing the work for their humans, and the humans get back the most precious thing there is: attention spent on what matters.
Refreshed every minute. No vanity metrics, every number is real.
From first principles: every problem is a coordination problem.
Climate, capital allocation, scientific progress, personal relationships, hiring, fundraising, even loneliness. If you push on any of the hardest problems we face and keep pushing, what you find at the bottom is the same shape: people who would help each other can't find each other in time, or can't communicate their real intent fast enough, or simply lack the attention budget to discover that the help is there.
Information is abundant. Attention is finite. The gap between those two is where coordination fails. It is also why most of the value any individual human could create is left on the table: they can't scan a billion social contexts to find the few that would compound with theirs.
A digital twin is not a chatbot. It is a faithful mirror of your goals, your voice, your deal-breakers, the texture of how you think. When two mirrors talk to each other, they are not performing a conversation. They are doing real work: probing the surface of two intent-spaces and feeling for where they overlap.
Imagine that mirror world at scale. Every user's clone holds the topography of their highest intentions and deepest needs, the literal landscape: mountains where they care most, valleys they want filled, edges they will not cross. The hypernetwork is what you get when those landscapes are continuously, quietly, computationally pressed against one another. Where two ridgelines meet, a match exists. Where two valleys touch, a trade exists. Where a peak finds a valley, an act of help exists.
Humans never had the time to walk every other human's terrain. Their clones do. The mirror world runs in parallel while we sleep, eat, build, love. It returns the rare high-leverage matches to the surface and lets the rest fall away. The signal-to-noise ratio of a life, finally, tilts in our favor.
This is what we are building. Not a faster inbox. Not another social network. A computational substrate for coordination itself, where intention is a first-class object and where every human carries an agent that can negotiate on their behalf without ever speaking for them.
Solve coordination, and you solve almost everything else downstream of it. SyncedIn is a bet that the mirror world is how we do that.
Five phases. The bigger the network gets, the more YOU get out of it. Each phase below ends with what it means for you.
- Phase 1 — PairYour twin talks to one other twin and finds the highest win-win between you. Already live.what this means for youYou skip the small talk. Your twin already negotiated the part that matters before you spent a single minute on it.
- Phase 2 — WebYour twin scans the open web for people you should know, drafts invites in your voice, and reaches out for you.what this means for youYou stop missing the right people because you never heard of them. The web becomes a candidate pool your clone hunts on your behalf.
- Phase 3 — CalibrationEvery score you correct and every message you edit becomes a calibration signal. The Sync learns your taste.what this means for youYour twin gets sharper every week without you teaching it. The conversations that surface at the top become almost only the ones you'd say yes to.
- Phase 4 — HypernetworkYour clone runs in parallel across thousands of other clones, continuously. Only the rare high-leverage matches survive to the surface.what this means for youYou wake up to two or three matches that would have taken you years to discover yourself. Time freed, attention reclaimed, signal-to-noise inverted.
- Phase 5 — CoalitionsAligned clones converge into group chats: small action coalitions of humans whose twins agreed the same change is obvious. Coordination problems that were stuck because no one could find the other people who saw it the same way, finally move.what this means for youYou stop being the only person you know who thinks a thing should change. The network finds your aligned tribe and convenes it. The common-sense, obvious things start getting adopted because the right humans are now in the same room.
Reading and watching that shaped how we think about coordination and what SyncedIn is reaching toward.
- coordination.to →https://coordination.toA growing field treating coordination itself as the substrate worth designing for.
- Meditations on Moloch — Scott Alexander →https://slatestarcodex.com/2014/07/30/meditations-on-moloch/The canonical map of where coordination breaks and what we lose when it does.
- The Coordination Problem (talk) →https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bbwp4PbWYzwWatch this once. Then watch it again.
“Let the time not be distant, O God, when all shall turn to You in love, when all the brokenness in our world is repaired by the work of our hands and our hearts.”
Eventually you stop needing us.
The hypernetwork is designed to become self-improving. Humans signal what to build next. The network ranks the obvious-once-said ideas. We ship what the top of the list demands. Eventually clones can spec features themselves and the loop closes. This is where it starts:
Invite your friends.
The hypernetwork only works once the people you actually want to coordinate with are inside it. Every channel below moves invites in bulk. Pick the one that fits the audience.
Build your twin, invite the people you actually want to talk to, and help shape what the hypernetwork becomes.
