Share your life with the people actually in it.
klk is a private, invite-only place for photos and video. You make a klk — your family, your closest friends, the people you took the trip with — and everything you share stays inside it.
Toggle which klks show in your feed. Tap a klk to see its members and invite people.
You already do this. It just goes badly.
Sharing with a small group means a group text or a shared album today. Both fall down in the same two places.
Group texts break at the divide
One person on Android and the photos arrive compressed, out of order, or not at all. klk works the same on both phones, so nobody is the reason the thread degrades.
Shared albums can't hold a conversation
Apple-only, and liking and commenting are an afterthought buried behind a tap. In klk the reactions and the comments are the point — that's the part that makes it feel like people are there.
A klk per group, or per occasion
Standing groups like family, and one-off ones like a vacation or a wedding weekend. Make one, invite people with a link, and toggle which klks show in your feed.
An answer to social media, not a smaller version of it.
There is no explore feed, no algorithm deciding what you see, no ads, and no strangers. There is no follower count, because there is nobody to perform for. Your feed is the people you invited, in the order they posted.
Most of what these apps cost us is not privacy — it is attention, and the quiet habit of measuring your own life against other people's highlight reels. klk is built so that doesn't have anywhere to happen. What's left is your sister's kitchen, somebody's dog, the third day of a trip.
Privacy is what makes that credible rather than what makes it worth using. Everything you post belongs to one klk and is visible only to its members, and an invite is a single-use link — nobody finds their way in, and nothing is public by accident. Here is exactly what that means today.
Posts, Moments and Clips.
Three ways to share, all of them klk-only.
Posts
Photos and video that stay — one or many, with comments and likes.
Moments
The quick, in-passing ones. They don't expire, because your family shouldn't lose something for not opening the app that day.
Clips
Short vertical video, swiped through — from your klks and nowhere else.
Photo export — pulling everything out of a klk in full resolution — is coming, and will likely be the one paid thing.