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The social network Bluesky, which on Friday announced a new Milestone 40 million userswill soon begin testing Dislikes as a way to improve personalization in the main Discover feed and beyond.
The news was shared alongside a host of others Conversation control updates and changeswhich includes smaller edits to replies, improved detection of toxic comments, and other ways to prioritize conversations that are most relevant to the individual user.
With the Dislike feature rolling out soon, Bluesky will take into account the new signal to improve user personalization. When users “dislike” posts, the system will learn what type of content they want to see less. This will help inform more than just how feeds rank content, but also respond to ratings.
The company explained that the changes are designed to make Bluesky a place for more “fun, authentic, and respectful exchanges” — an edict that comes after a month of turmoil on the platform, some users said. The platform was again criticized for its moderate decisions. While Bluesky is designed as a decentralized network where users run their own moderation, some subsets of Bluesky users want the platform itself to block bad actors and… Controversial figures Instead of leaving it up to users to block them.
However, Bluesky wants to focus more on the tools it provides users to control their own experience.
Today, that includes things like moderation lists that allow users to quickly block a group of people they don’t want to interact with, content filtering controls, muted words, and the ability to opt in to other moderation providers. Bluesky also allows users to segregate quote posts to limit unwanted attention, which has long influenced the toxic culture of “DippingOn X (formerly Twitter).
In addition to dislikes, the company says it’s testing a combination of rating updates, design changes, and other feedback tools to improve conversations on its network.
This includes a new system that will identify “social neighborhoods” on Bluesky, meaning connections between people who often interact and respond to each other. Bluesky says it prioritizes replies from people “closest to your area,” to make the conversations you see in your feed more relevant and familiar. The new “I Don’t Like” may have some impact here, too, Plosky says.
This, in particular, is an area where Threads, from Meta, has been challenged at times.
As Max Read’s Bulletin Writer I noticed last yearthreads tend to put their users in a confusing feed where conversations they were not connected to appear, sometimes in the middle of a story. “It is often impossible to know who is responding to whom and where and why you see certain posts,” Reed noted. “They appear out of nowhere and lead nowhere,” he wrote at the time.
Bluesky’s plan to map social neighborhoods could address this problem as it expands.
The company also said its latest model does a better job of detecting “toxic, spam, off-topic, or posted in bad faith” replies, lowering their rankings in threads, search results, and notifications.
Another change to the reply button will now take users to the full thread instead of going directly to the compose screen, which may encourage users to read the thread before replying.
Plosky says this is a simple way to “reduce content collapse and redundant replies” — another criticism he tends to levy on Twitter/X.
Additionally, the company is tweaking the reply settings feature to make it clearer for users as they can control who is allowed to reply to their posts.