Bluesky CEO Jay Graber transitions roles to focus on innovation, with Toni Schneider stepping in as interim CEO.
Bluesky CEO Jay Graber transitions roles to focus on innovation, with Toni Schneider stepping in as interim CEO.
  • Bluesky CEO Jay Graber steps down to become Chief Innovation Officer, focusing on building new features.
  • Toni Schneider, former Automattic CEO, appointed as interim CEO to scale the platform.
  • Bluesky emphasizes its open-source, billionaire-proof structure, differentiating itself from competitors like X.
  • The platform has seen significant user growth, reaching 42 million users, driven by dissatisfaction with centralized platforms.

From the Kitchen to the Lab A New Course for Bluesky's Chef

Right, listen up. Jay Graber, Bluesky's head chef, is moving from running the whole bloody restaurant to experimenting in the development kitchen. She's stepping down as CEO to become Chief Innovation Officer. Says she wants to get back to building new things, which, frankly, is fair enough. Some people are brilliant at creating the menu, others are better at running the service.

A Seasoned Pro Takes the Helm Is He Up to the Task

Now, enter Toni Schneider, ex-CEO of Automattic, the WordPress people, and a partner at True Ventures. He's the interim CEO now, and he is stepping into the kitchen. Automattic and True Ventures? They're investors, apparently. So, the board is clearly keeping it in the family. Schneider's job? Scaling this thing. Make sure the soufflé doesn't collapse under pressure. And speaking of pressure, the AI world is heating up, and it's time to consider the infrastructure needed to support it. Companies like Nvidia are making huge bets on the future, as explored in Nvidia's $4 Billion Bet on Photonics Sparks AI Infrastructure Revolution. This kind of investment could reshape how platforms like Bluesky operate in the future, ensuring they have the backbone to handle the demands of a growing user base.

Bluesky's Secret Sauce Open Source and Billionaire-Proof

Graber made it very clear that Bluesky is 'billionaire-proof' because it's open source. What happened to Twitter, now X, couldn't happen to them in the same way. Users could always move. That's a clever move, I have to admit, it's like letting customers see you cook, they trust you more, but if you screw up, everyone sees it.

From Zero to Forty-Two Million Users That's a Lot of Appetizers

User growth has been quite the rollercoaster. After the 2024 election, there was a massive influx. Went from 15.2 million to over 21 million in a week. Now, they're sitting at 42 million. Not bad, but let's be honest, it's a fraction of what X and Threads are pulling in. Still, they're serving a different dish. Remember, it's not about quantity, it's about quality.

X Marks the Exit Lessons from the Bird App

Bluesky spun out of Twitter back in 2021 and cut ties after Musk took over. Smart move. Sometimes you have to ditch the old, stale ingredients and start fresh. You learn from other people's mistakes. In the kitchen, you learn from the burn.

The Future's on the Menu Scaling, Innovation, and Staying Open

So, what's next? Schneider needs to scale the platform, Graber needs to keep innovating, and Bluesky needs to stay true to its open-source ethos. They've got a unique recipe. It's up to them to cook it to perfection. Otherwise, it's straight to the bin.


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