From Meme to Method: Rethinking Animal Adoption Platforms through the Cat Distribution System
Carl Angelo Angcana, Jamlech Iram Gojo Cruz

TL;DR
This paper explores how culturally embedded metaphors like the Cat Distribution System can inform the redesign of animal adoption platforms, emphasizing user engagement and intuitive matchmaking.
Contribution
It introduces a prototype adoption system inspired by CDS principles, incorporating algorithmic matchmaking and community features, evaluated with positive user feedback.
Findings
Users found the system easy to use and engaging.
Participants appreciated the serendipitous aspect of adoption.
Areas for improvement include transparency and communication.
Abstract
The internet folklore of the Cat Distribution System (CDS) humorously suggests that cats are "assigned" to people rather than intentionally sought. Beyond its playful origins, CDS reflects a culturally resonant way people perceive and engage in adoption, and this user context can guide the redesign and improvement of adoption systems. In the Philippines, where an estimated 13.11 million stray cats and dogs place the country sixth worldwide in overpopulation, this framing offers a novel way to rethink adoption platforms. We developed a prototype application inspired by CDS principles, focusing on features such as algorithmic matchmaking, community reporting, and proximity-based discovery. An initial evaluation with potential users (n=35) indicated that the system was positively received for its ease of use and its alignment with users' intuitive expectations, though participants…
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