
I Built a Social Platform Where You Can Post in Hindi and Someone in Tokyo Reads It in Japanese β Here's How
π The Problem That Kept Me Up at Night Picture this. You discover a Reddit thread about traditional cooking techniques. The most insightful comment β bar none β is buried at the bottom. You almost miss it. It's written in Portuguese. The person clearly knows what they're talking about. They're detailed, nuanced, passionate. But only 3% of Reddit users will ever read it. The other 97% scrolled past without even knowing what they missed. That comment deserved 10,000 upvotes. It got 2. This happens billions of times a day across every social platform on the internet. Here's the uncomfortable truth: only 25.9% of internet users speak English as their primary language . Yet English dominates over 60% of online content. The global conversation we think we're having? It's actually a very exclusive English-speaking club. I couldn't stop thinking about this. So I built EchoBoard β a social discussion platform where language is no longer a barrier to being heard. Write in Hindi. Someone in Tokyo
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