Mosuki is the best way to find out about events from people you know. And it's free.
How do you find out about cool events? From your friends. Mosuki's word-of-mouth system works the same way, and it ensures that you'll never miss another cool event, and that you'll only hear about events that are interesting to you.
Mosuki makes communication about events so easy you don't need to think about it. Sit back, relax, and let Mosuki tell you and your friends about what's going on. And don't worry; our word-of-mouth system means you'll only hear about stuff that's genuinely interesting to you.
Your privacy and security are our top priority. You can create private and public events, share events with only certain people, and you'll never have to worry about people you don't know figuring out what events you are going to.
Mosuki is a revolution in how you and your friends spend your time.
Click the "Events" icon to see events that your friends are going to:

Click on an event to find out more about it:

When you find an interesting event, add it to your calendar. Once it's on your calendar, all your friends will be able to find this event in the same way. This is what Mosuki calls sharing by "word of mouth."

When you have events on your calendar, or when there are new events from your friends, you'll get an email in the morning with this information:

You can, of course, turn the daily email off, on your preferences page.
Creating events is quick and easy. Click »add event, then type in a name and a date & time, then click the "Add event" button.

You can share each event exactly how you want. Word of mouth is for events like parties, which can travel from your friends to their friends, to friends of their friends, and so on. Publish to the world is for events like concerts that anyone should be able to see. You can also make events private, so nobody can see them, or share them just with a small group of friends.

You can invite anyone to events on Mosuki -- and not just events you created. Just click Tell / send invitation to send a quick invitation.

You can invite your friends on Mosuki with the Add Mosuki Members button, and put in the email addresses of people who aren't yet Mosuki members. Everyone you invite can see the event without creating an account.

Every event (and every place) has a discussion forum. You can plan potlucks, carpools, meeting times, submit corrections, and share thoughts and photos about the event after it's over. Every discussion becomes a mailing list: as soon as you add the event to your calendar, you'll get all the discussion in email. There's no need to log in to Mosuki to see what people are saying. And of course, you can turn off the automatic email if you want.

What's the best way to organize and remember your events? A calendar! Our calendar has day, week, month, and list views. But if you want to use another calendar program, you can! We provide iCalendar feeds, so you can use iCal, Outlook, or a number of other calendar programs to keep track of your Mosuki events. And you can even import iCalendar feeds from other websites into Mosuki.

Click the "People" icon to invite friends:

You can also search for friends who are already members on the "People" page:

When you find someone you know, start sharing events with them by clicking the "Share events with..." button.

Click on the "Invites" icon to see invitations and other messages sent to you.

The "Personal" tab shows invitations and other personal messages. The "All" tab shows all messages in all discussion forums that you are subscribed to (See Discussion forums for more information).

When you create a new event, you can pick from a list of existing places:

If your place isn't found, you can create a new one, too. Places have a list of all the events happening there, a map and discussion forums.

You can find your favorite places, and see what's happening at each, by clicking the "Places" icon in the header.
You can create custom groups of friends, if you want to control which friends get to see which events. Click on the "People" icon to see the groups you've created or to create a new group:

Editing groups is quick and easy. You can even create custom groups for a single event.

Groups are always private too; that way, you don't have to worry about someone saying "Hey, why am I not in your 'best buddies' group?"
Mosuki takes your privacy and security very seriously. Everything in Mosuki uses the same privacy controls -- not just events, but places, photos, feeds, and more. You can always check the sharing settings on anything that you own to make sure they are correct.
Although Mosuki lets events travel by word of mouth, or be published to the world, your interest in an event -- whether or not it's on your calendar -- is never public. This means you don't have to worry about someone you don't know using Mosuki to figure out where you are going to be on Saturday night or finding a good time to break into your house.
If you want to make a private event (for a doctor's appointment, or even a hot date with that special someone), it's just as easy as making a public event.
You will see things like "a few people you don't know" or "3 events outside your network..." on Mosuki. Don't worry; this is just Mosuki protecting the privacy of all of our users, including you.
Logging in to Mosuki always uses secure (SSL) connections, and once you're logged in, you can switch to use a secure connection on any page just by clicking this unlocked lock icon in the header:
Once the connection is secure, the icon will change to a locked lock:
Mosuki can import events in the internet-standard iCalendar format, from uploaded files or from URLs on the web. Just click "Add new feed" in the sidebar on the calendar:

Then, paste the URL of the iCalendar feed, or upload an iCalendar file, and it will appear on your Mosuki calendar.

You can use external calendar programs like iCal and Outlook to import your Mosuki calendar. Just click »Subscribe/export on the calendar page and pick your calendar program (or click "Help" for directions). Because Mosuki is committed to protecting your privacy, all iCalendar feeds require your Mosuki password.

Many pages on Mosuki also have RSS feeds. These include the event lists, your invites & messages, public places, user profiles and any discussion forum. To subscribe, just click on the small RSS icon:
This way, you can follow new events on Mosuki and any discussion forums in your RSS reader. Because Mosuki is committed to protecting your privacy, our RSS feeds either require your Mosuki password, or contain only public information. Most RSS readers can subscribe to password-protected RSS feeds.
Mosuki is the best way to find out about events from your friends! It's the best way to share events with your friends!
Mosuki will change your life, make you cooler, get you free drinks, and bring about world peace!
Sign up for Mosuki now!
