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Bluesky Is Making an AI Feature. Here's Why Everyone Seems to Hate It Already

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Why This Matters

Bluesky's new AI feature, Attie, aims to personalize social media feeds through conversational AI, reflecting a broader industry trend toward AI integration. However, user backlash highlights concerns over privacy, platform functionality, and the rapid adoption of AI without addressing existing user needs. This situation underscores the importance of balancing innovation with user trust and platform stability in the evolving tech landscape.

Key Takeaways

In its relatively short history as a social media platform, Bluesky has a pretty decent record for listening to its users. The site saw a surge in popularity after the 2024 election, following what many saw as Twitter's collapse after it was purchased, renamed, and dramatically changed by Elon Musk. But its newest AI project isn't winning over many users.

Attie is a new AI assistant being built by Bluesky that can create custom social media feeds. It's named after the infrastructure behind Bluesky and Attie, the AT Protocol. Attie will be a separate, optional app. It's currently in an invite-only closed beta.

Bluesky's CEO-turned-chief innovation officer, Jay Graber, is leading the company's Exploration team building Attie. In a personal blog post published on March 28, she describes Attie as a kind of vibe-coding tool. She wrote, "[Attie] feels more like having a conversation than configuring software. You describe the sort of posts you want to see, and the coding agent builds the feed you described."

The Attie website showcases how the AI could work. Attie

It seems like Attie is aiming to build a more comprehensive timeline than you could get simply by searching for topics. You can do more detailed searches with Attie, like "Poetry, long-form fiction craft, and writing process from people I follow," as one example on the Attie website reads. It shouldn't be creating new posts.

But many Bluesky users aren't happy with the introduction of AI on the platform. In an era when social media platforms are diving all in on AI, Bluesky's Attie signals that nobody is immune to the internet's AI makeover.

Attie AI backlash

Almost immediately after Attie was announced, posts started flowing in. Users raised concerns about their posts being shared in the AI-compiled feeds. Some Bluesky users are angry about the company's investment in advanced, agentic AI, even though Bluesky still lacks comparatively basic functions, such as the ability to edit posts, DM images and follow hashtags. Many users bemoaned Attie as Bluesky's version of AI slop, one that nobody seemingly asked for.

While Attie is a separate app, the AI agent does have a Bluesky-run account on the social media platform. TechCrunch reported Tuesday that Attie is one of the most-blocked Bluesky accounts, second only to Vice President JD Vance. Attie has reportedly been blocked by 125,000 Bluesky users, and Vance by 180,000.

Graber told CNET in an email that the company wants to assure users that it's listening to their feedback and that Attie doesn't represent a change to Bluesky, as it's a separate app.

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