With a large number of users comes great responsibility – that’s what the people responsible for the fast-growing social media platform Bluesky are experiencing. After the startup initially made headlines with millions of new users, the workforce is now facing massive complaints about inappropriate postings on its own platform.
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BlueSky itself has now informed its users about the situation. A post from the “Bluesky Safety” account noted 42,000 complaints the team alone received within 24 hours from Thursday evening to Friday evening – a record high. Users apparently complained about spam, fraudulent attempts, and unspecified trolling activities. The team writes that child pornography is also discussed and reports about it are given the highest priority. Overall, Bluesky is following the triage strategy now familiar from emergency medicine: the worst cases are treated first, then the rest in descending order of severity.

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Bluesky has grown by over 3 million people in the last week – welcome! With each wave of development naturally comes an increase in moderation reports. Here’s a status report on how the Trust and Security team is handling this:
– BlueSky Security (@safety.bsky.app, November 15, 2024 at 6:10 pm
The flow of complaints is not stopping
According to additional information from BlueSky, the team is currently receiving an average of 3,000 complaints per hour. In 2023, the total number of complaints was approximately 360,000, Which is as per the previous information received from the company This affected 3.4 percent of accounts on BlueSky. As the number of users of an online platform increases, logically the number of “black sheep” also increases.
It remains to be seen whether the proportion of reported accounts in the total user base will also increase, but the numbers can at least vaguely be put into perspective: based on BlueSky information, if we assume that on Friday there were 42,000. If there were complaints, there were approximately 6.7 million posts to the contrary, according to statistics portal jaz Were published that day. Jazz data comes from Bluesky itself.
action is not always required
However, experience shows that only a fraction of reported activities actually result in action. For example, of the approximately 46,000 accounts reported in 2023, only 5,000 were ultimately blocked.
However, the startup still has to keep up with the growth of the Bluesky community: due to numerous complaints, the company is now looking to recruit new employees, according to a Bluesky post. The first candidates are already posting their LinkedIn profiles in the comments.
Million new users after X wave of migration
Bluesky has welcomed several large waves of new users in recent weeks, with the last major influx coming after Republican Donald Trump won the US presidential election. Tech billionaires and owners
Recently, Bluesky crossed the 16 million user mark, with the last million added in about a day and a half. This means that Bluesky is now growing almost as fast as Threads, which is backed by Meta Group.
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