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- cross-posted to:
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Did they really allow it?
Someone made a username with a slur in it. Two hours later they were banned and the redundancy patched. A little after that an apology was announced.
Yeah, this reads like such a nothingburger I don’t see why it’s news. Yeah, they didn’t add enough filters, but fixed it as soon as it was pointed out. Why continue the outrage?
Why continue the outrage?
To satisfy and monetize the clickbaited.
In a vaccum it wouldn’t be such a big issue, but it’s already a pattern at this point.
Ooh “under fire” what’s next, they’re going to get “slammed”? That’ll show em.
what is Bluesky and why should I care?
It’s another microblogging site backed by Jack Dorsey (former Twitter CEO) and other venture capital. They made a lot of claims and now they are failing to follow-up. I think they are still invite-only so even if you do care, you need someone who is in already to join.
Technically they also use a federated protocol called Authenticated Transfer (AT). Though overall from what I can tell they’re not doing well, Threads has over 100 million users and Mastadon has over 10 million, while Bluesky only has a bit over 300,000.
While it’s true Bluesky has only a small number of sign-ups, it’s still invite-only, which limits how many people can sign up. There has been lots of interest in Bluesky, and many people simply haven’t been able to get an invite.
I however, don’t disagree otherwise. I think their choice to be invite only is going to put them in a harder position long-term, especially with ActivityPub taking off and being a lot more open.
Also Jack Dorsey is a fucking asshat and I don’t trust him being the controlling factor for a fucking internet protocol, but that’s just, like, my opinion man.
I wouldn’t underestimate the power of building up slowly and making sure you get things right. It’s what the fediverse and mastodon have been doing.
Right now, no one is happy with the state of social media and no alternative looks particularly great to everyone, so during a state of flux, writing off anything is probably a mistake.
Apparently, there’s some reason to think that Dorsey isn’t that involved in BS, and more interested in Nostr (as it’s a crypto thing). He’s not the CEO of BS, Jay Graber is, and many have expressed respect for her and dismay at how Dorsey is the face of the project.
Reasons to be positive about BS that I’ve heard from others:1
- It’s protocol allows for user selected moderation policies, that are kinda in place at the moment and some have enjoyed
- Despite it’s recent problems, its culture is more BIPOC friendly than mastodon
- User independence/mobility is baked in to the protocol (apparently?) but not a thing at all on the fediverse
For me, reasons 1 & 3 are structural issues the fediverse is likely to struggle with and which, when solved, can generally improve the health and attractiveness of the platform in question, including, I’d guess, issues around point 2.
[1]: I’m not on there or particularly interested in it FWIW. My interest more comes from a concern that an open protocol is trickier than ActivityPub/fediverse think and may require much more than what ActivityPub has done to really work long term.
@BrikoX Thing is: By now they are having a fixed list of not allowed user names. They now updated that list.