Opinion Bluesky is dying - Which is a shame, because I don’t want these people back on Twitter

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Sean Thomas
18 June 2025, 5:01am

1750796126882.webp
(iStock)

In the middle of Cairo there’s a place called the City of the Dead. It is a dusty sprawl of mausoleums, sepulchres and crumbling Mameluke tombs, that has housed the corpses of the city for over a thousand years. On a dank winter’s dusk, it feels especially lifeless – deformed dogs vanish into shadows, random fires burn vile rubbish. But that’s when you notice children’s toys. Cheap clothes drying outside a tomb. And you realise, with a shudder: my God, some poor people live here. That, roughly, is the vibe on Bluesky today.

Ironically, Bluesky is now much nastier than Twitter

In case you’ve forgotten, Bluesky is the social media platform once seen as the great Twitter replacement. A year ago, after Elon Musk took over Twitter, unbanned a host of right-wing voices, changed the name (irritatingly) to X, and then allegedly began doing Hitler salutes in the canteen, many people took offence and decamped to Bluesky.

Of course, Bluesky wasn’t the first attempt to replace Twitter. Do you remember Mastodon? You probably don’t, because joining it required a PhD in computer science. First you had to choose a server, then you tried to communicate with the seven other users in your digital iso-pod, but they could only message you every second Thursday, probably from space. It wasn’t a social medium so much as a social micro-coffin.

Bluesky, however, had two big advantages over the other Twitter alternatives. First: it was basically identical to Twitter – so much so, it looked like a rip-off, akin to a cheap Rolex in Bangkok. It was easy to join, and easy to use, even if posts were called ‘skeets’, a word that sounds like an unfortunate accident in one’s pants. ‘I just did a skeet. Sorry.’

Secondly – and crucially – Bluesky gained early momentum, especially during Trump’s rise, which gave it an aura of viability and seriousness. It was benefitting from the network effect – which is when a product becomes more valuable as more people use it. Like a party that gets better and better as more friends show up.

At the height of its early surge, lots of people showed up for Bluesky. In a matter of months it grew from a few hundred thousand users to maybe 36 million, most of them Muskphobic refugees streaming across the digital Dnieper from Twitter, along with the merely curious.

I was one of the latter. In those heady early days – when the sky was the limit for Bluesky – a lot of not-very-leftwing people like me snuck over to have a look at the new place. I didn’t leave Twitter/X, but I checked out the fresh offering.

I had good reasons for this. Many of the voices I liked on Twitter were leaving for Bluesky, taking their valuable weirdness with them. Often they were completely non-political – cricket nerds, wine enthusiasts, German archaeologists. One day they were filling my feed with jokes, Ashes stats and pre-ceramic gossip, the next day they were gone. Twitter was poorer as a result. So I joined Bluesky to find them again. Also, it seemed Bluesky might genuinely replace Twitter, and I wanted to be prepped with an account, if the big switcheroo happened.

However, as soon as I looked around Bluesky, I sensed it wouldn’t work. It didn’t yet feel like a desolate vale of inhabited sepulchres – it was more like a bad vegan café, full of humourless puritans with mouths like cats’ bottoms, eager to congratulate themselves on how much better and nobler they were than the awful centrists back on Twitter. (Right-wing people were, of course, beyond discussion – unmentionably evil). It wasn’t very inviting for people like me. And so, even then, I had the notion: Bluesky is going to fail.

And thus it is. As I write, Bluesky is dying – turning into the City of the Dead. On virtually all metrics it is sliding down a slope that threatens to become a cliff, as a reverse network effect kicks in. For example, in terms of unique daily posts, Bluesky peaked at 1.5 million posts per day in late 2024, but is now down to 700,000 – and the trend looks solid. Over the same period, daily ‘likes’ are down from 2.7m to 1.5m. And still it slides.

1750796008788.webp
GsdTAMXWQAASLl4.webpGsdTBErXsAAAapp.webpGsdTBucXAAAatln.webp
Tweet (Archive)

This kind of decay is disastrous for a social medium – because it is self-fulfilling. As the site shrinks down to a hardcore of tedious, earnest people, so these people will turn viciously on each other, out of sheer boredom – lacking anyone else to spar with (ironically, Bluesky is now much nastier than Twitter). In this way the site becomes even less appealing.

The end of all this is what we witness today: a kind of morbid silence. You can spend a day among the tombs of Bluesky and the only sign of life is a feeble joke in the afternoon. Maybe a meme falls, silently and unnoticed, like a snowflake on a gravestone.

Tellingly, several big names who moved to Bluesky have quietly returned to X. Quintessential Centrist Dad and Times journalist Hugo Rifkind is one – at least he’s honest enough to admit the reason (‘Bluesky is dull’). As for large organisations, it’s noticeable that the Guardian staged a performative departure from Twitter to Bluesky, yet virtually all its star writers – from Owen Jones to John Harris – sensibly stayed put. I bet the Guardian itself will return, in time.

These people are dreadful – shrill, humourless, dour. We don’t want them back

All of which leads to the question – should we care? If Bluesky dies and the Blueskiers slink back to Muskville, is that a problem? I think it is.

For one thing, Bluesky currently functions as a kind of philosophical quarantine zone. It’s a safe place where the most politically infected can stew among themselves. Yes, they grow sicker and more misinformed, but that’s all the more reason to keep them there. These people are dreadful – shrill, humourless, dour. We don’t want them back. We must therefore take action to save their ghetto. But what?

Here is where another historical analogy might be useful. It’s said that during the Black Death, villagers on Dartmoor would leave food on remote rocks – so that the pestiferous people up in the hills didn’t have to descend into the settlements to survive. The plague was kept at altitude, where it belonged. I propose we do the same for Bluesky. Every so often, one of us – the sane, the informed, the occasionally funny – must venture into the eerie cemetery of Bluesky, and leave behind a little sustenance: a decent gag, a nugget of insight. Just enough to keep the infected entertained. Just enough to keep them from returning to civilisation.

Source (Archive)
 
The purity spiral in action - every iteration of a lefty social space set up to avoid disinfo/hatespeech/right wing intrusion on a previous one? Will become more and more censorious and , like an isotope, only last a fraction of it's parent group's lifespan before it splinters due to "too much disinfo/hatespeech/right wing intrusion" and the next cycle starts.
 
In the middle of Cairo there’s a place called the City of the Dead. It is a dusty sprawl of mausoleums, sepulchres and crumbling Mameluke tombs, that has housed the corpses of the city for over a thousand years. On a dank winter’s dusk, it feels especially lifeless – deformed dogs vanish into shadows, random fires burn vile rubbish. But that’s when you notice children’s toys
This dipshit makes it sound like an area in Dark Souls.
 
The best part is that they have recently started the checkmark program and it works exactly like the Blue Checkmark under Jack's Twitter.
If they weren't already sick of the purity testing, they are going to get another dose.
 
Name me one social media that is different than another, it is impossible to
I haven't had social media for over 5 years now, but from what I remember the break down goes as such:
  • Instagram - Glamorized version of your life + unofficial dating profile
  • Snapchat - Parasocial interactions + nudes
  • Twitter - Hot takes + shit talking + recent happenings
  • Facebook - Under 40 = Very high-level overview of someone's life + Over 40 = Out of touch boomer shit
I just kept it to what I know and the actual social media platforms that aren't also forums like Reddit
 
Many of the voices I liked on Twitter were leaving for Bluesky, taking their valuable weirdness with them. Often they were completely non-political – cricket nerds, wine enthusiasts, German archaeologists. One day they were filling my feed with jokes, Ashes stats and pre-ceramic gossip, the next day they were gone. Twitter was poorer as a result.
it was more like a bad vegan café, full of humourless puritans with mouths like cats’ bottoms, eager to congratulate themselves on how much better and nobler they were than the awful centrists back on Twitter.
How are these two paragraphs back-to-back? "All my favorite non-political wino accounts stopped making jokes on Twitter and went to Bluesky where they became humorless puritans?" Earth to journo, they were the same people before.
 
This is my favorite part:

like a bad vegan café, full of humourless puritans with mouths like cats’ bottoms, eager to congratulate themselves on how much better and nobler they were than the awful centrists back on Twitter.

Vivid, evocative, and so, so accurate.
 
lol now the libsharts get to feel the hollow pangs of the infinite splinter sites
 
These people are dreadful – shrill, humourless, dour. We don’t want them back. We must therefore take action to save their ghetto. But what?
“Take action to save their ghetto” I loled.
 
Or KFers could go to Bluesky and take turns pissing people off, getting banned, and traumatizing the site, just like we on the redboards did to Christian Chat about 25 years ago. It was great...after a while, get on there and just post "RA!", or tell them you were God, and they'd kick you out, then someone else would get on and do their fuckery. 👍
The Sharty kind of already did that when they got HWABAG trending, but there's always room for more.
 
same thing happened to me, even my fave sports accounts and local musicians (none of whom were libs) decided to break ranks and go over to BlueSky-- and yeah some have already returned.

I don't understand why they left in the first place. they use Amazon even though Bezos owns it, right? they use FB even though Zuckerberg owns it, do they really think Musk is any worse than those guys?
I don't think so & I hate Musk, lol.

I think they will all stampede back to X when they are finally bored to death.
I get bored just thinking of it.
 
Last edited:
Stupid phone fingers I didn't want to say anything

Anyway in my academia-adjacent occupation bluesky still seems to be the place to be fwiw
 
The next big social media website will be something new, not another copycat of feed-based addiction-tuned algorithm machines.
I sincerely wish blogging hadn't died off in popularity. I know some people still publish blogs, but they're not even close to the most popular medium of choice anymore; most people are so fucking illiterate these days they can't sustain a thought long enough to write in prose enough to reach "blog article" length, and even more people have such short attention spans they wouldn't make it to the end of an article anyway.

Twitter and all the other "short form post" social media platforms have seriously damaged humanity's capacity for communication.

ETA:
Wait WHAT?!?

Kind of a bomb to just sneak in there. Had no idea he was this überbased!
I suspect it was a tongue-in-cheek remark. Musk raised his arm at a speech and the press grabbed hold of it like they always do and screamed "omigod that's the Roman salute, he's a nazi!" Y'know, the same way Pelosi, Obama, and other lefties have also done on stage (because raising your hand to wave or point at things is a common gesture) because it's literally fucking nothing. This author was probably mocking this reaction by the retards on social media.
 
I sincerely wish blogging hadn't died off in popularity. I know some people still publish blogs, but they're not even close to the most popular medium of choice anymore; most people are so fucking illiterate these days they can't sustain a thought long enough to write in prose enough to reach "blog article" length, and even more people have such short attention spans they wouldn't make it to the end of an article anyway.

Twitter and all the other "short form post" social media platforms have seriously damaged humanity's capacity for communication.
I miss the days in the early to mid 00's where you could stumble across random people's websites, not blogs, sites, with pictures and everything that just documented interesting local history around their town, or their farm, or their hobby, whatever..... and before Google street view or social media, you got a nice window into another part of the country you otherwise would never see and never interact with.
 
Back
Top Bottom