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Tuesday, April 01, 2025

Bsky Bluesky Primer: & Bluesky, Smiling at Me

Wiki on Bluesky


Bluer Sky …


Blue Wave 


X’s dominance ‘over’ as Bluesky becomes new hub for research

Data indicates more scholars turning to alternative social media site to post about their work after Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover


Bsky profile scores


https://account.bsky.app/signin


What is Bluesky? Everything You Need To Know

How to Get Started on Bluesky: A Guide for Beginners


Master BlueSky: A Complete Tutorial for Beginners (video)


How to Get Started With Bluesky, the X Rival Everyone's Flocking To


Rise and Rise of Bsky


The Blue Wave River - Tipping Point - Social Media Sky is Blue Again


🦋 Hillary Clinton - Barack Obama on Bsky …


How Jay Graber Is Making Sure Bluesky Never Turns Into Elon Musk’s X


In November 2024, Bluesky surpassed Truth Social’s monthly users. That’s a major 

win for one app, and a death knell for the other.



Bluesky Proves Stagnant Monopolies Are Strangling the Internet One tiny company has the bloated Facebook empire scrambling to respond.



Two Hundred Million Bluesky posts scrapped by 2 different groups


Failla A, Rossetti G (2024) “I’m in the Bluesky Tonight”: Insights from a year worth of social data. PLoS ONE 19(11): e0310330. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0310330“Pollution of online social spaces caused by rampaging d/misinformation is a growing societal concern. 

However, recent decisions to reduce access to social media APIs are causing a shortage of publicly available, recent, social media data, thus hindering the advancement of computational social science as a whole. 

We present a large, high-coverage dataset of social interactions and user-generated content from Bluesky Social to address this pressing issue. The dataset contains the complete post history of over 4M users (81% of all registered accounts), totalling 235M posts. We also make available social data covering follow, comment, repost, and quote interactions. 

Since Bluesky allows users to create and like feed generators(i.e., content recommendation algorithms), we also release the full output of several popular algorithms available on the platform, along with their timestamped “like” interactions. 

This dataset allows novel analysis of online behavior and human-machine engagement patterns. Notably, it provides ground-truth data for studying the effects of content exposure and self-selection and performing content virality and diffusion analysis.”

  • Hugging Face: “Dataset Card for 1 Million Bluesky Posts – This dataset contains 1 million public posts collected from Bluesky Social’s firehose API, intended for machine learning research and experimentation with social media data…Daniel van Strien‬‪@danielvanstrien.bsky.social‬ – First dataset for the new @huggingface.bsky.social @bsky.app community organisation: one-million-bluesky-posts. 1M public posts from Bluesky’s firehose API. Includes text, metadata, and language predictions.. BUT then…I’ve removed the data from this dataset since there was a lot of community pushback about its creation/uploading. I will leave the dataset repository up to allow room for discussion of how datasets can be used to help improve Bluesky and allow people to build the tools they need to build their own open models and approaches to creating feeds that work for their needs. Please feel free to continue to leave feedback in the discussions here…”
  • BUT….See also Dr. Casey Fiesler @cfiesler.bsky.social: “…Researchers have been using social media content without your consent for a LONG time. Not just AI/ML research, of course, all kinds. There is a non-zero chance that one of your tweets or reddit comments is quoted in a research paper somewhere. www.howwegettonext.com/scientists-l…And Twitter for a long time was absolutely the biggest source of social media data for research. @zey.bsky.socialonce called Twitter the “model organism” of social media research: researchers used Twitter because like the fruit fly, the platform and its users were just so easy to study…In 2016 my collaborator @profprof.bsky.social and I surveyed Twitter users about how they felt about researchers using their tweets. And one of the findings was that most of them had no idea this was happening. But when they found out… they cared. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/…

Bluesky, Smiling at Me 

Bluesky has a hint of the old Twitter magic, but the feeling of freedom it offers might be even better.Reporting from San Francisco 
Dec. 3, 2024
By Kevin Roose 



Reporting from San Francisco After an hour or so of scrolling through Bluesky the other night, I felt something I haven’t felt on social media in a long time: free. 
Free from Elon Musk, and his tedious quest to turn X into a right-wing echo chamber where he and his friends are the permanent, inescapable main characters. 
Free from Threads and its suffocating algorithm, which suppresses news and real-time discussions in favor of bland engagement bait.

 Free from my own bad habit, honed through years of obsessive Twitter use, of packaging my thoughts for consumption by an audience of opinionated strangers.

You may be wondering why Bluesky — an experimental social media app that was started in 2019 under Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s former chief executive, before becoming an independent company in 2021 — is attracting so much attention these days.
In the past several weeks, the app has swelled to more than 20 million users, and is adding more than a million users a day. It’s been the top-ranked free app on both Apple’s and Google’s app stores. Celebrities, politicians and artists are flocking to it. A.O.C.! Lizzo! Mark Cuban! Its 20-person team can barely keep up with all the growth.
I’ll admit that I was surprised by Bluesky’s sudden jolt of popularity. I joined the app last year, when it was an invitation-only beta product. I found some of what happened there interesting, but ultimately, I wasn’t persuaded it would ever fill the Twitter-shaped hole in my information diet. It seemed buggy and complicated, and it lacked some of the features (such as direct messages) that made Twitter useful.
It was also, frankly, kind of annoying. The most active posters on my feed were all left-wing Twitter discontents, united in their hatred of Mr. Musk yet unable to stop talking about him. My account went dormant, and I moved on to other platforms.
But Bluesky’s post-election growth spurt persuaded me to give it a second look. It’s much better now. And while I still don’t think Bluesky — or any social media app — will ever fully replace the old Twitter, I get what the excitement is about.

For burned-out social media users like me, joining Bluesky can be a reset — a chance to start over on a platform that isn’t engineered to maximize engagement, that isn’t owned by a capricious billionaire or an amoral advertising conglomerate, and that doesn’t treat its users as lab rats. It’s a throwback to a rawer, lower-stakes era of social media, before elections and economies hinged on what happened there.
And while Bluesky is still small compared with X and Threads — Mr. Musk claimed in May that X had 600 million monthly active users, and Threads recently reported having roughly 275 million users — it has a vitality right now that other Twitter replacements lack.
I’ve been wrong about social apps before. I thought Clubhouse, the pandemic-era hit that convened socially starved techies for glorified conference calls, would have staying power. But I suspect Bluesky’s growth is a sign that text-based social media is less dead than I thought, and that there is still plenty of demand for the kind of social networking experience that Twitter offered before Mr. Musk took it over. (Threads appears to be coming to the same realization. This week, the platform announcedseveral seemingly Bluesky-inspired changes, including custom feeds and a new algorithm that emphasizes content from people you follow.)
For the uninitiated, some Bluesky basics: On the surface, the app resembles a stripped-down version of Twitter. Users post short messages with text, photos or videos. There are followers, likes and reshares. Many new users build out their lists by adding groups of accounts known as “starter packs.” There are starter packs for journalistssoccer fanslegal expertsnephrologistsdatabase engineersPokémon fans and more. The platform has added features like direct messages and an anti-harassment “nuclear block” option that allows users to sever all connections with accounts they don’t want to see.
It gets more interesting under the hood, because Bluesky is built on top of something called the “AT Protocol,” a decentralized, open-source technology that is designed to let users control how they experience social media. Eventually, that could allow users to pick their own feed-ranking algorithms, choose their own moderation rules or even move their accounts to a different app while preserving their followers and post histories.
It’s still early days on most of that stuff, though, and to be honest, I’m not sure any of it will matter much to the average user. Most people don’t want to roll their own algorithm — they just want an app that works, where a bunch of people they like post interesting things at a regular clip. Social media apps live and die on their vibes, and right now, Bluesky’s vibes are better than the alternatives.
Some of that may be temporary. (It’s normal for new, buzzy social apps to go through a euphoric growth phase before stalling out later on.) Some of it may be related to Bluesky’s decentralized design, which gives users a sense that they’re building something together, rather than just signing up for yet another Twitter clone. It may also be a post-election bump that will taper off if liberals’ anger at Mr. Musk subsides.
Whatever the reason, I think people who are nostalgic for the old Twitter should give Bluesky a shot, with a few caveats.
First: I must warn you that Bluesky is weird. It’s getting less weird by the day, but it’s still full of drama, inside jokes, not-safe-for-work images and quirky subcommunities, all of which can be jarring for newcomers. (To give you a sense: One of the early trends on Bluesky was users posting lewd images of ALF, the 1980s sitcom character.)
Second, if what you’re looking for is a one-for-one substitute for the old Twitter — a global watering hole where celebrities, politicians, journalists, scientists and sports fans all gathered to discuss the news of the day — you won’t find it on Bluesky. (Or anywhere else, for that matter.)
We’re in an era of fractured social media now, where communities gather in different spaces for different purposes, and I suspect that Bluesky, no matter how popular it gets, will be only one part of a much larger ecosystem that includes X, Threads, group chats and more.
Third, the people who are getting the most out of Bluesky — or, at least, the people whose posts I’m enjoying the most — aren’t the people who simply brought their existing social media presences over from other networks and continued posting. They’re the people who are using Bluesky as a chance to reinvent themselves and spurn bad habits, squash old beefs, try out a new posting style, let loose a little.

I’m still working on that part. But if you want to watch me figure it out, you can find me over at @kevinroose.com. I’ll be the guy posting about tech news, and maybe the occasional ALF joke.

Kevin Roose is a Times technology columnist and a host of the podcast "Hard Fork." More about Kevin Roose
A version of this article appears in print on Nov. 25, 2024, Section B, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Bluesky, Smiling at MeOrder Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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