March 28, 2026

You write the feed; it reads the room

Attie.ai

No more mystery feeds—say it, see it; you’re in charge

TLDR: Attie.ai lets you shape your social feed by typing what you want, and it runs on the AT Protocol so your profile and follows can move between apps. Commenters are split between excitement over real control and worries about filter bubbles, moderation, and whether 'no algorithm' is just clever branding.

Attie.ai rolled up like a timeline therapist: tell it what you care about and your feed rearranges itself. The pitch is pure antidote to doomscrolling—no dropdowns, no keyword bingo, just plain language. Built on the AT Protocol, it promises your name, friends, and feeds are portable, not trapped. The reveal turned comment sections into a split-screen of confetti and side-eye.

The hype squad shouted, “Finally, I’m the algorithm!” People who miss Google Reader called it “RSS, but fun,” and productivity nerds declared this the end of tab chaos. Fans love the promise that nothing is optimized for someone else’s ad metrics. A few early testers claimed the feed actually feels calmer, like a custom radio station for your brain.

Then came the skeptics with flaming hot takes. “Plain language still gets parsed by an algorithm,” they snarked, calling the pitch clever marketing. Others worried about filter bubbles—if you only ask for what you want, do you see anything new? Decentralization raised eyebrows too: portable identity means your worst posts move with you. Memes flew: “Clippy is back—‘Looks like you’re trying to have a personality,’” and “Dear Attie, only dogs and strike news today.” The vibe: hopeful, but ready to roast.

Key Points

  • Attie.ai offers a personalized feed shaped by users’ plain-language instructions.
  • The product avoids traditional UI elements like dropdowns and keyword filters.
  • Personalization is positioned as user-controlled rather than driven by engagement-optimized algorithms.
  • Attie.ai is built on the AT Protocol to ensure portability of identity, social graph, and feeds.
  • The service seeks to reduce information overload by focusing content on what users say matters to them.

Hottest takes

"Congrats, you’re the algorithm—don’t nerf yourself" — algo_anarchist
"This is RSS with vibes and a prompt tax" — rss_renaissance
"Portable identity sounds great until your worst takes travel too" — privacy_panda
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