Hatepass

Hatepass

Allow yourself to be hated

1 follower

Does anyone hate you? Send him a personal permission to hate, set a framework for the relationship, and start chatting on your terms.
Hatepass gallery image
Hatepass gallery image
Hatepass gallery image
Free
Launch Team
OS Ninja
OS Ninja
Explore and Learn Open Source using AI
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What do you think? …

Sergey Manakov
Hi All! Once I needed to apologize to a person whom I undeservedly offended and he had unpleasant feelings for me. This happens to everyone. The apology would have been too cold, but just at that time I read a story about a student who was selling "n-word pass" to other students. The situation was different, but the method worked very well - I gave him written permission to insult me ​​in return. It turned out better than just exchanging very bad words. Inspired by experience, I made a website for generating such postcards for different situations. Hatepass is a simple way to start complex communication. When relationships between people are weighed down by past resentments or misunderstanding, it is necessary to give an outlet to feelings, like a hot steam from a kettle, in order to resume constructive communication The best way to do this is sarcasm. Hatepass is a way to manage relationships with ironic web-cards. To limit emotional ping-pong, postcards have a limited expiration date and are authenticated using a proprietary blockchain (for now, we will transfer to NFT later). The script that works is very simple: 1. Choose Hatepass card 2. Fill in the details of the sender and recipient 3. Download generated Hatepass 4. Send it via messenger or email, twit or post somewhere. If you want, print it out and hand it in personally. What opportunities does Hatepass give? 1. Free gift with emotional content 2. A tool for starting communication 3. Social media content (9gag, reddit, twitter, etc) 4. And tool for other smm 5. The medium of your ad 6. NFT оbject I was inspired by such "businesses" as Potato Parcel and Million Dollar Homepage. Calling them "startups" is too loud and disrespectful to real developers, but these fun projects had excellent commercial success and demonstrated the need for people to communicate outside the box.