The skies aren't getting bluer

The skies aren't getting bluer

25 Apr 2025, 21:18 by Mors

If you're one of the people who jumped ship from X to Bluesky, well, congratulations! You've officially joined the last great migration of a dying digital civilization!

I find the current interest in Bluesky...well, interesting! It isn't just about the vibes or the features, and it certainly isn't about decentralization. It's about escape. Escape from a space that used to be about forming genuine connections, but now exists primarily to extract attention, warp discourse, and serve you an endless firehose of slop that makes you feel like you're losing brain cells by the scroll.

And yet here we are again. On another app. Doing the same thing, hoping it'll be different this time.

Spoiler: It probably won't be. But I get why we're trying.

What the hell happened?

A decade ago, social media was about people. Reconnecting with long lost friends, discovering cool artists, and more importantly, having weirdly meaningful discussions with strangers about Sonic the Hedgehog at 3AM. There was chaos, but there was also life. Now? Now there's only chaos left.

X (or Twitter, whatever) is what happens when a social media platform stops respecting its very own users and starts seeing them as cows to be milked. You open the app, and you're immediately shoved to the “For You” feed, an algorithm curated nightmare of stolen memes, outrage farming, and Elon dickriding. Because, you know, that's what gets the “engagement” going. And if you want to get noticed, you either also play this game, or vanish.

Now you might say "O-okay, why would I even want to get engagement on X though?". Because X literally pays you for it. That's right, you get paid for the amount of interactions you get on your posts...if you subscribe to their premium service and make enough noise, that is.

As a result, we now have a bunch of “professional posters” on X who are more interested in collecting likes and sparking very surface-level conversations than sharing anything actually interesting, or fostering meaningful interactions. These people even get sponsors! Companies, especially gambling and adult entertainment related ones, pay them a ton. And the algorithm loves this shit, doesn't matter if it's a thinly veiled ad or not.

An awful X post

What does this have to do with community notes? Why is this on my feed? I hate this place.

You know what the algorithm doesn't love? Anything that contains links, or even mentions of other platforms. X does NOT want you to leave their app and click away, it wants you to keep scrolling until your eyeballs fall out. So it buries posts that try to point you elsewhere.

Say you made a YouTube video and want to share it with the world. Too bad! You got no choice but to drop it in the replies with a bunch of periods and slashes in the link. Wanna write a blog post? Just turn it into a 47-part thread instead! Or better yet, buy X Premiumâ„¢ to unlock longer posts. Now you can have an obnoxiously large post in a timeline where everything else is 280 characters long. Who needs a blog when you got an X “the everything app” account?

The system feels hostile to authenticity. The second you try to say something meaningful, personal, or nuanced, the algorithm quietly nudges you aside in favor of someone talking about how the moon is not real (not the moon landing, the moon itself), or someone else quoting the said post with a low effort roast. Yes, this was an actual post I saw while I was writing this. No, I didn't screenshot it. It gave me too much brain damage.

Enter Bluesky!

So, obviously, people were rather excited about Bluesky when it first started making rounds. And honestly? I get it, I was excited too. I mean, it feels like a time capsule in a way. A place where social media still feels personal, a little awkward, and, you know, social! A place where people are actually posting because they want to, not because they're chasing metrics. It was fun, and it still is! I enjoy being there!

Unlike X, Bluesky actually respects you! Yeah sure, it also has an algorithm powered timeline, but you can turn it off really easily, and there's no bullshit like posting links downranking your posts. In fact, you can even add custom timelines, based on a selection of simple algorithms made by other people. It's all about choice.

But here's the thing nobody wants to admit:

Bluesky is built on the same foundation as X. Same microblogging format, same incentive structure, same basic affordances. The thing that made X rot wasn't just its ownership and algorithms, it was scale, moderation, monetization, and the gravitational pull of being The Place Everyone Had To Be At.

The issue is that once you're big enough, every decision becomes about keeping the machine running. And that machine feeds on people, not for what they say, but for how much they can be farmed.

Despite being “decentralized” (which means very little in practice anyway), Bluesky isn't immune to this. The clock is already ticking, and the cracks are already showing.

Let's start with funding. Unlike Mastodon, Bluesky didn't just spring out of a vacuum, powered by idealist open-source dreams. It was started by the company Twitter, under Jack Dorsey's own order, and is now funded by crypto investment funds, the same speculative vultures that tried to sell us Web3 as if it's not a load of bullshit.

You might be saying "Mors, you're being too cynical. Maybe this is just the regular startup stuff they have to do to stay afloat. You know, you take the money you can, build the platform, and then figure out the ethics later!".

Well, I don't agree. The ethics aren't for later, they're for now. Every decision made in the platform's (relative) infancy will shape its direction moving forward. And by giving a voice to people whose entire business model is about creating artificial scarcity and milking the concept of art for money they're not building a better web. They're just decorating the same coffin.

I mean, Bluesky has already begun censoring posts at the request of authoritarian governments, specifically Turkey. This is what's going on over at X right now as well. Turkish people were in the middle of a mass exodus to Bluesky, hoping it would offer a freer alternative to X, which has had taken down hundreds of posts and accounts for being critical of the Turkish government...only to find the same suppression waiting for them on the other side.

A Bluesky post blocked in Turkey

Wonder what awful things the Turkish government is hiding from us…

How it looks uncensored

LMAO. We are living in times beyond parody.

You cannot claim to be the new free and open town square while simultaneously bending the knee to regimes that crush dissent. The excuse, of course, is “compliance with local laws”. But if compliance means aiding censorship and silencing marginalized voices abroad, then maybe the dream was dead on arrival.

And as if that wasn't enough of a heel turn, Bluesky is now testing a verification system. You know, the one thing their whole URL-based handles system was supposed to eliminate. I mean, the whole point decentralization was to let users control their own presence without relying on the central platform as an arbiter...yet look where we are.

See, the problem isn't just that these platforms keep making the same mistakes, it's that they can't seem to imagine anything else. Their vision is just Twitter again.

Social Media Was a Beautiful Mistake

We weren't meant to talk to this many people, this often, this loudly.

I mean, the internet wasn't originally intended for social media anyway, it was for the message boards, IRC channels, Usenet threads… Small, insular communities with a barrier of entry. Not just technologically, but culturally. You had to want to be there. You had to learn the language, the etiquette, the context. There was friction, and that friction gave it a meaning.

And as the internet matured, the edges started getting sanded down. More and more people joined, from all corners of the world, for better or worse. And where people go, capital follows. Companies didn't just join the internet, they colonized it.

Soon enough, modern social media turned every conversation into a show, every moment into content, and every relationship into metrics. We started measuring our worth in followers and reach. We became addicted not just to attention, but to being seen a certain way.

That's the real sickness. Not the interaction bait accounts, or the porn bots, or the scammers, or the nazis. These are just the symptoms. It's us thinking of ourselves as brands, where we forget how to just exist online without selling something, even if what we're selling is just a cooler, more clever version of ourselves. I know it because I'm guilty of all this too.

Earlier I blamed X's algorithm for encouraging slop, but the truth is more complicated than that. X only saw an opportunity, and capitalized on it by accelerating the process. No, Twitter saw an opportunity, let's not forget that this problem has been going on for longer than Elon Musk has owned the site.

Bluesky was a chance to start fresh, but it's also a monument to our inability to let go. It's nostalgia wrapped in code. We want things to go back to how they were. We want the joy of posting dumb shit without thinking about analytics. We want our freedom back from algorithmic puppeteering, from platforms that treat us like meat for the content grinder.

And we're willing to lie to ourselves to get it, even if for briefly.

...Fuck

The social media dream is cracking. Everyone's tired of being online and nowhere at the same time. That's why we keep reaching for the next thing. Mastodon! Cohost! Hive! Threads! Bluesky! Maybe if we just repackage the format, make it decentralized or something, and clean up the vibes… Maybe then it'll work!

I don't think it will. Not unless we rethink what we even want from being online, and stop building systems that reward the worst instincts of human behavior…

Don't get me wrong, Bluesky will survive. Heck, it might even end up replacing X! But it's not the salvation we need. It's a pit stop on the long, slow, necessary collapse of the social media as we know it.

And honestly? That might not be such a bad thing.

The solution?

If what we really miss is conversation and what we want is connection, then maybe it's time to stop chasing the next big, wide, open social media platform, and start creating the small, weird, intentional spaces we actually want to exist in.

That's why we're building a forum.

A screenshot of the forums

Looks rough right now, but I swear, we're still working on it.

Yep, just a good old fashioned forum! Posts in threads, threads in boards. You write something, people respond. No algorithms, no follower counts, none of that shit. You know, just something that feels like the old internet! Not in a clunky dial-up kinda way, but in a “come as you are” kinda way.

I'm well aware that this isn't a grand solution to all those problems I mentioned, and it's not intended to be. Think of it more as a personal act of rebellion...or maybe survival.

Either way, if any of this resonates with you and you're as exhausted as we are, but not quite ready to give up...keep an eye out! We'll be sharing more soon!

Until then, I dunno, touch some grass or something. And if you haven't fully given up on the social media, follow us on Bluesky. As flawed as it might be, it's our best option right now.

See you on the forum.

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