Transparent systems
People should be able to understand the broad reasons content reaches them.
Ryyvr is the first public project from Ryyvr Media Inc., built around clearer recommendations, clearer moderation, and more understandable creator economics.
Ryyvr is the first major public project from Ryyvr Media Inc. It is being developed as a social video platform with clearer recommendation context, moderation transparency, and user-tunable discovery.
Future projects may also live under Ryyvr Media Inc. as the company expands its work around healthier incentives, media infrastructure, and public-facing publication.

Founder
Tim Stewart founded Ryyvr Media Inc. to build social technology that is easier for creators, viewers, and communities to understand and trust.
His background sits across several parts of the content ecosystem. He has worked with and around YouTube creators whose combined audiences exceed 100 million subscribers, supported title and thumbnail testing, and helped coordinate creator collaborations.
Tim has helped operate Discord communities that grew into the tens of thousands of members. He has also worked on development, moderation, and bug testing for a large Minecraft gaming network, including leading moderator teams and shaping moderation workflows designed to be clearer and easier to follow.
From the creator side, Tim has seen how much work can sit behind a single upload, how often platforms reward packaging over substance, and how little recourse creators may have when monetization, copyright, or moderation decisions are unclear.
From the viewer side, he has seen how feeds can keep serving content without explaining where it came from, why it appeared, or what signals shaped the recommendation.
Ryyvr is built around a simple belief: platforms should explain more of their systems. Recommendation context, moderation outcomes, monetization status, and user controls belong in the product foundation rather than being treated as afterthoughts.
Ryyvr is the first public project from Ryyvr Media Inc.
People should be able to understand the broad reasons content reaches them.
Safety decisions should be clearer, reviewable where appropriate, and communicated plainly.
Creator economics should be legible enough for serious work, not hidden behind mystery.