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Library


Dating, Consent, and Platform Design (Who Is the Internet Safe For?)
Dating platforms shape how people meet, respond, disengage, and move on. This playbook looks at safety in dating through platform design. It focuses on consent, refusal, and exit, and how systems handle these moments at scale. It covers: how persistence is encouraged how blocking and reporting work what responsibility platforms carry Read below:
1 min read


Work, Platforms, and Digital Safety (Who Is the Internet Safe For?)
For many people, the internet is where work happens. This playbook treats platforms as workplaces. It looks at how income, access, and exposure are managed through automated systems. It focuses on: how risk shows up in digital work how decisions about pay and access are made what safety should mean when livelihoods depend on platforms Read below:
1 min read


Care, Safety, and Digital Systems (Who Is the Internet Safe For? )
Care now moves through apps, alerts, and automated advice. That changes how responsibility is carried when something goes wrong. This playbook looks at safety in digital care systems from the system side. It focuses on the design choices that shape what caregivers are expected to manage every day. It covers: where pressure builds how decisions get automated what systems should hold so people don’t have to Read here.
1 min read


Invisible Threads, Indispensable Hands
Every day, India’s caregivers hold up childhood through choices no system records: hours bargained, rupees stretched, dignity defended, joy carved out of scarcity. Invisible Threads, Indispensable Hands is a six-month journey into these hidden ledgers of care. It asks us to see carers not as beneficiaries, but as the true architects of the systems we all depend on.
2 min read


Lullabies, Masculinities & Care: looking at fatherhood through the everyday act of a lullaby
What can a lullaby tell us about care, gender, and everyday parenting? This study uses the simple act of singing to a child as a lens to explore how fathers in India navigate tenderness, and where they hold back. We spoke to 500 men across crowded train stations, weddings, temples, markets, and homes, asking just one thing: Do you sing to your children? The answers opened up a deeper inquiry, into masculinity, memory, and how cultural context shapes what feels possible. From
1 min read

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