Bluesky may look like X. It might share a co-founder with X. And as some people flock to the platform amid changes to X, the comparisons to the platform formerly known as Twitter are perhaps inevitable.
But Bluesky doesn’t want to be seen as an alternative to X at all, and instead has bigger ambitions, Rose Wang, COO of Bluesky, told us.
“We’re not positioning ourselves against X,” she said. “We’re positioning ourselves as the new social web.”
Bluesky certainly seems to have benefitted from X’s woes and missteps. When Brazil temporarily banned X after it refused to remove accounts accused of spreading misinformation about the 2022 Brazilian presidential election, Bluesky saw 4 million sign-ups, Wang said. When X changed its policy to allow users blocked by someone to still be able to see their posts, she said it saw another surge.
And as of late November, following the US presidential election in which X owner Elon Musk was heavily involved, Bluesky had surpassed 21 million users worldwide, with as many as 1 million sign-ups per day.
“There’s a lot of hunger to have a place to have global conversation that isn’t a partisan platform, and that there’s basically not many places that serve that need anymore,” Wang said. “We’re fulfilling that need.”
Amid that growth, Bluesky, which became open to the public in February and has just 20 full-time employees, is planning to capitalize on its momentum and aiming to change how social media companies do business.
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