rewrite this title in spanish Bluesky Adds Longer Videos, DM Requests Folder
rewrite Open source Twitter-clone app Bluesky has announced its latest app update, with longer videos, a new chat requests filter, and additional language translation options.
The main update is an extension of its video limit, with users now able to post 3 minute long clips in the app. Up till now, Bluesky users have been limited to 1 minute videos attached to their posts (do they still call them “skeets”?), but from now on, with the latest version of the app, you’ll have triple that capacity.
Video has become a bigger focus for the platform, as it has for every social app, with Bluesky also adding a dedicated video feed earlier in the year, as well as a video tab on user profiles.
As such, longer video uploads is a logical update, which will expand its capacity for video engagement.
Bluesky’s also added a new “Chat Requests” folder, where DMs from users you’re not connected to will go: Users will then be able to accept or reject these mysterious missives.
It’s also added a new profile mute option on posts, which will make it easier to get rid of unwanted attention:
“Tap the three-dot menu and select «Mute account» to mute directly from a post.” Bluesky saw a 17x increase in user-submitted reports last year, which aligns with its overall usage growth, but it also likely means that the team will need to explore more control options to cater to this aspect.
Finally, it’s also added three new community translations: Welsh, Scottish Gaelic, and Esperanto.
It’s still too hard to say whether Bluesky is going to catch on in a significant way, and become a real contender for the major social apps.
It definitely has established a solid user base, with some 30 million active users, according to the latest tracking data, while it’s also seen massive growth over the past year. All of these are good indicators, with an expanding audience that’s steadily growing momentum, bringing even more people to the app.
But still, 30 million is a long way off of X (500m MAU) and Threads (320m MAU), and without the network effects of those bigger apps, it’s difficult to see how Bluesky is going to gain the necessary upswing to really challenge those other platforms. It’s also worth noting that Bluesky’s momentum is slowing. After gaining 10m additional users in the three months between September and November last year (taking it to 20m MAU), it’s taken four months to add another 10m users.
So its growth is still steady, but it isn’t seeing the same magnetism that other platforms have after reaching relative user counts, compounding those numbers by getting more attention.
That could also suggest that interest in Bluesky is peaking already, which would mean that it’s unlikely to get to even 100m users. And with both X and Threads offering a more expansive set of features, and linked to people’s established networks, there’s also no clear differentiator for the platform, other than it being decentralized. Which, honestly, I don’t think the vast majority of potential users care about. It’s a good approach, and there are definite benefits to shifting away from the billionaire-owned apps, and maintaining control of your information. But most regular users, in my experience at least, don’t look into things that deep. They just want to log on and connect with their friends and interests.
If you can get those elements into your app, then you’re going to win, and that’s also why I don’t see Bluesky becoming a truly viable, scalable option,
It’s a cool project, for sure, and 30 million users is significant. But unless there are more major controversies that spark big backlash against the big players, the next level of growth could be difficult. in spanish
rewrite this title in spanish Bluesky Adds Trending Topics, Exceeds 25 Million Users
rewrite While you’re busy working out your Threads strategy, Bluesky is also steadily rising, and adding new features to align with its audience demands.
Just before Christmas, Bluesky launched its own version of Trending Topics, which will make it easier for users to tap into the latest discussions of interest in the app. As you can see in this example, Bluesky’s trending topics will be based on systematic detection of key terms, highlighting the topics that are generating the most mentions at any given time.
Here’s another look at the trending list, and the display when you tap through on a topic (via Radu Oncescu): Bluesky says that this is the first version of its trending topics approach, and that it’ll be iterating based on user feedback.
As per Bluesky:
“You can disable it with the X button or in settings, while your mute words transfer to trending.”
The display is currently available in English language, with Bluesky looking to a wider release in the near future. It’s the latest advance for the Twitter-clone app, bringing it more into line with what Twitter had been. And many users do see Bluesky as a more Twitter-esque alternative than other apps, particularly due to Threads’ restrictions on political content, which has seemingly limited its capacity to highlight the most relevant news trends.
Bluesky is also more friendly to external links, and that’s helped to better align the platform with publishers and journalists, two key creator groups that are actively seeking to post content.
And given that very few people actually post anything to social apps, with most simply reading, this is a key consideration for growth. Which is why Meta was so freaked out about Bluesky’s sudden rise late last year, though that burst in growth has slowed somewhat, based on the latest stats.
According to Bluesky chief Jay Graber, Bluesky now has 25.9 million users. The platform rose from 13 million total users in October, to 20 million by mid-November, so its growth has slowed a little over the past 6 weeks.
But it is still growing, while Graber also notes that: “In the last month and a half, organizations [have reported] a 2-10x increase in the amount of engagement they receive.”
So there may well be opportunity there for brands, but for comparison, 25.9 million users is only 8.63% of Threads’ current active user base. But it could also be worth establishing a Bluesky presence now, just in case it continues to gain more traction, though I’d be hesitant on going “all in” on Bluesky just yet. Maybe, if it reaches 100 million users, it’ll be a more legitimate consideration. Though how it’ll actually get to that level, without funding via ads (which Bluesky is trying to avoid), also remains to be seen. in spanish