“My mother runs a home bakery,” says Dhruv, a Bengaluru-based coder. “She has 400 ‘followers’ on her Hublaagram. Zero Reels. Zero hashtags. But if she posts ‘Eggless cake ready at 4 PM’ in our apartment’s WhatsApp group, it sells out in 12 minutes. Try doing that with an Instagram shop.” For years, big tech believed the future was global, faceless, and infinite. But Hublaagram reveals a counter-trend: people are exhausted by abundance.
Because there is no moderation except the group admin, rumors spread like monsoon floods. A false “gas cylinder leak” alert can empty a market in ten minutes. A whispered suspicion about a new tenant becomes an unspoken boycott. And if you are excluded from the inner circle of forwarded messages? You become invisible. hublaagram me
“It’s democratic only if you are inside the whatsapp ,” says Farah, a young woman who moved back to her small town after college. “I had to ask my mother to add me to the building’s ‘kitchen secrets’ group. There’s no ‘request to join’ button. There’s only ‘beta, ask your mom.’” In 2024, a startup tried to “disrupt” this by building an app called GramCircle . It failed in six months. Why? Because Hublaagram doesn’t need an interface. It needs chai . “My mother runs a home bakery,” says Dhruv,