🦋 Bluesky Social
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> Last week, there was a one-day story about the NFL prohibiting the Patriots from being on Bluesky, with some speculation that it’s got something to do with the NFL appeasing X owner Elon Musk. He has certainly earned any skepticism about his influence and motivations, but there’s not much reason to believe there’s a political angle. Every major social media platform had some period during its early growth when teams wanted to use it, but the NFL hadn’t yet blessed it. > >For teams, it’s simple -- they want to be where their fans are. If a new social platform experiences big user growth, any content producer worth their salary is going to want to join them. > >But it’s not so simple in the eyes of the NFL, which is acutely aware of the league’s capability to be a business kingmaker. If all 32 teams organically got on Bluesky, the platform could create a robust NFL news hub out of those accounts without much work at all. The NFL knows exactly what that would be worth to Bluesky, and wants to be paid for it.
- techcrunch.com Here are the apps battling to be become the 'TikTok for Bluesky' | TechCrunch
TikTok's potential U.S. ban has sparked a flurry of development within the open social web community. Several new applications are being built that could
- techcrunch.com Custom feed builder Graze is building a business on Bluesky, and investors are paying attention | TechCrunch
A startup called Graze, which lets you build your own feeds for the Bluesky social network, has caught investors' attention. In addition to offering tools
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Twitter alternative Bluesky hits 30 million users
bnonews.com Twitter alternative Bluesky hits 30 million users - BNO NewsBluesky, an alternative to the social networking website previously known as Twitter, has reached 30 million registered users, according to the company. Bluesky has experienced a surge in interest in the wake of last year’s presidential election in the U.S., although it’s still relatively small when...
> Bluesky, an alternative to the social networking website previously known as Twitter, has reached 30 million registered users, according to the company. > >Bluesky has experienced a surge in interest in the wake of last year’s presidential election in the U.S., although it’s still relatively small when compared to Twitter/X and Meta’s Threads, both of which have hundreds of millions of active users. > >Bluesky’s 30 millionth user signed up at 11:21 p.m. ET on Tuesday, according to the company. It’s unclear how many of those are actively using the app but data from one tracker showed at least 2 million accounts liked a post on Tuesday alone.