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Bluesky wants you to stop calling it a Twitter alternative

Every day on the site formerly known as Twitter, people post long goodbyes to their followers and instructions on how to find them in “the other place”.

They are referring, of course, to Bluesky.

But although their fortunes are intertwined, Bluesky’s chief operating officer, Rose Wang, bristles at the constant comparisons.

“People just think that we’re some sort of Twitter alternative, but we’re very much not,” she tells The Independent. “It’d be like calling 1950s TV the same thing as YouTube.”

The similarities are hard to avoid, however. Bluesky started as a project within Twitter in 2019 and was spun out into a separate company by founder Jack Dorsey two years later. The look and feel of the site is nearly the same as X. Squint and you’d be forgiven for mistaking them.

For an increasing number of users, though, there is one crucial difference: Bluesky is not run by a megalomaniac billionaire intent on bending the world to his will.

Since Elon Musk purchased Twitter in 2022, millions of longtime users have abandoned the site in anger over its rightward lurch and an increasingly poor user experience. Musk fired some 80 percent of staff, amplified right-wing viewpoints, removed safeguards that protected against hate speech and misinformation, reinstated the accounts of extremists and neo-Nazis (and Trump), and banned critical journalists.

After luring liberals from X at a steady pace since launching in February last year, Bluesky had a breakout moment in the days after the re-election of Donald Trump. The company saw about a million users a day joining, for several days, amid fury over Musk’s support for Trump’s campaign. Some 115,000 users deactivated their accounts on X during the same period, the largest-ever mass exit from the platform.

By next year, according to analysts at digital research company eMarketer, Musk’s takeover will have cost X some 7 million users.

Instagram’s Threads was seen as the favored alternative for a while, and still has more users — but Bluesky now has the momentum.

Wang believes the reason that Bluesky is rising while others are stalling comes down to control. Bluesky doesn’t have an overriding algorithm that controls what people see. If X is the town square, where the loudest voices drown out everyone else, then Bluesky is a party that you have chosen to attend with guests similar to you.

Users can create lists of people to follow based on subject or interest, block accounts and certain types of posts, and adopt custom timeline filters. All of these controls are aimed at creating a more social, less toxic, environment.

“It’s actually lending itself to much more pro-social behavior,” Wang says. “We’re used to being trapped in one algorithm controlled by a small group of people. That’s no longer the case, and our users have built over 50,000 different feeds, like different cat feeds or Taylor Swift feeds, or F1 feeds. And these feeds basically provide cozier corners for people with other similar interests to meet each other.”

Still, Bluesky faces some big challenges in overtaking X. Twitter’s rise was fuelled by news-addicted journalists and readers, quickly becoming the go-to place for big news events — a cultural and political meeting point.

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  • Source of information and images “independent”

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