matt brown’s radical new app matches desperate renters with strangers to share beds, and critics say it’s a moral sinkhole.
In a move that has sparked outrage from family values groups and housing advocates alike, controversial tech entrepreneur matt brown has launched “Co-Sleep,” a platform that pairs cash-strapped renters with strangers willing to share a single bed for a fee. The app, which went viral overnight, claims to solve the housing crisis by turning bedrooms into hyper-dense sleeping pods, but moral critics are sounding the alarm. “This isn’t innovation—it’s the final nail in the coffin of human dignity,” warns Dr. Linda Graves, a sociologist at the Institute for Ethical Living. “We are commodifying intimacy, privacy, and basic decency. Brown is telling society that the only way to survive is to surrender every last shred of personal space and safety to a stranger.” With reports of landlords already using the app to quadruple occupancy in studio apartments, parents are panicking over the erosion of family boundaries, while law enforcement fears it will breed exploitation. As matt brown celebrates a million downloads, the rest of us are left wondering: have we officially crossed the line from communal living into a society that has lost its moral compass entirely?