Hermes, the link doesn't lead me to anywhere.
@Hermes2020
That's strange. I just checked and it works for me. Here is a copy and paste of the answer:
Yes —
there are several good alternatives to Facebook (Meta) for hosting interest-based communities and groups that are either based outside the U.S., decentralized, or focused on community (not algorithmic social feeds). The best choice depends on how you want your group to function (discussion forums vs. chat, privacy priorities, event/calendar features, etc.).
These aren’t traditional “Facebook groups” but let you build communities with privacy, data control, and often GDPR-friendly hosting:
Federated / “Fediverse” Options
These are open-source systems where anyone can host a server (often in Europe or elsewhere), set rules, and connect with other servers worldwide.
- Friendica – A decentralized social networking platform that connects instances (servers) and supports group communication, discussions, and content sharing similar to Facebook-like networks. It’s part of the federated network, so you can interact across multiple servers.
- Diaspora – Open-source, privacy-focused social network (pods can be hosted anywhere). It lets users create groups (“Aspects”) for sharing posts with specific audiences.
- Mastodon – A federated microblogging service (more like Twitter than Facebook) but with strong community building potential around hashtags and instance themes; best for shared interests and topic-focused interaction.
- Lemmy (similar to Reddit within the Fediverse) — community boards and topic-driven discussions hosted on independent instances.
- Mobilizon – A Europe-originated open-source platform focused specifically on group management and event planning (not-for-profit, privacy/FGDR-friendly). You can create groups, manage events, and connect people around interests like arts or exhibitions.
If your priority isn’t decentralization but a group feature set similar to Facebook Groups, these options work well (note: these aren’t always small U.S. companies, and many support international use):
Forum-Style / Organized Discussion
- Discourse – A structured forum platform you can self-host or pay to use, great for thematic art communities and long-form discussion threads.
- Tribe – Customizable community platform with discussion boards, polls, and integration features (good for organisations).
Chat-Focused & Real-Time Communities
- Discord – Though U.S.-founded, it’s widely used globally with servers and channels for organised interest groups; very strong for real-time chat, voice, events, and niche communities.
- Telegram Groups/Channels – Excellent for large groups (up to 200,000 members) and flexible sharing (files, polls, announcements). Not U.S.-centric and popular internationally.
- Slack – More professional, excellent for structured channels and group discussions (used worldwide).
While some aren’t direct Facebook group replacements, they cater to specific creative communities:
- CultureInside – A social networking site for artists (European-based network for visual arts, exhibitions, collaborations).
Not fully Facebook-like, but useful for interest communities:
- Reddit – Topic-centric forums (“subreddits”) allow deep discussion and community organisation (not U.S. government controlled but headquartered in USA).
- Tumblr Communities – New community feature with interest-based group pages.
If you want full control (including data localisation outside USA), you can use software to create your own community platform:
- Open Social Network tools like HumHub, Oxwall, Open Source Social Network (OSSN) — can be self-hosted and tailored to group needs (forums, events, media sharing).
Summary
There
are viable non-USA-centric alternatives if your priority is privacy, GDPR compliance, open standards, or avoiding large U.S. tech corporations. Decentralized federated platforms and event-focused tools offer community features but may differ in style from traditional Facebook groups. For classic group conversation and media sharing, hybrid model platforms like Discord and Telegram remain very strong even though they are global.