Just around 24 hours after Musk made his comments, more than 42,000 new users joined Bluesky, making it the biggest signup day yet for the currently invite-only platform that launched earlier this year.
Bluesky saw a total of 53,585 new signups by the end of Tuesday, September 19. The new users gained in that single day make up 5 percent of the platform’s entire user base of 1,125,499 total accounts.
The new user signups are tracked via the third-party website “Bluesky Stats.” Looking over Bluesky signup numbers on the tracker for the past month, it appears that the platform usually sees from 10,000 to 20,000 new signups per day. Bluesky has doubled its usual daily new user numbers already, with many more hours left in the day still to go.
It’s impossible to know whether Musk’s comments about charging users to post on X really played a role in this, but it almost certainly had some effect.
Why would anyone think Bluesky is any better than Twitter? There are no fundamental differences.
From a feature-functional perspective, sure, but it’s not entirely true. The biggest differentiators for social media are rarely the core features, but the content and friends. There’s a few specific groups that have slowly been migrating from Twitter and Mastodon there.
There’s a couple of very famous people that have moved over and because the audience is smaller, they tend to engage with people more often.
It’s not owned by Musk, which is what the average casual internet user is currently upset about with Twitter.
You are right. In principle, the AT protocol is designed for federation. But at the moment, there is only one Bluesky instance that everyone is signing up on. This makes it effectively centralized like Twitter. It is mind-boggling that people are ignoring Mastodon for this.
Less fascists for one