Social networking is exciting. Great apps make it easy for you to be heard and meet like-minded people Worldwide, in secure and privacy-respecting ways. Unfortunately, social apps today are way far from that reach, but I do believe the paradigm is about to change. Since Twitter was recently acquired by the wealthiest person on Earth, a 'decentralized' social network called Mastodon became especially popular amongst those willing to replace Twitter by a more sustainable app.

This article aims to describe why I strongly believe that

Bluesky and the AT protocol

The Authenticated Transfer Protocol (ATP) is an open-source (publicly available) software for large-scale distributed social applications, created by the company Bluesky, PBLLC, a fully independent company founded in late 2021. However, the bluesky project started in 2019 following Twitter co-founder and ex-CEO’s announcement that Twitter would be funding a small team to develop an open protocol for decentralized social media.

The founders and owners of Bluesky, PBLLC are:

The Bluesky community/team started by researching the state of art of decentralized social protocols, and concluded that none of them fully met the goals they had for a network that enables long-term public conversations at scale.

The ATP is based on a hybrid federated architecture, because it borrows features from peer-to-peer networks. Some of its most important features are (ref):

With email, if you change your provider then your email address has to change too. This is a common problem for federated social protocols, including ActivityPub (the one that powers Mastodon).

We want users to have an easy path to switching servers.

Our premise is to work towards a transparent and verifiable system from the bottom up by giving users ways to audit the performance of services and the ability to switch if they are dissatisfied.

Bluesky, PBLLC will soon launch its social app powered by the ATP. It will be called Bluesky Social and if you wish you can register for a waitlist to test the app in its private beta stage, i.e. before being launched to the public.

Mastodon (as it is) won't ever succeed


Sources of all images can be found in the original article - link below.

References A

A Self-Authenticating Social Protocol

Decentralized Social Networks — comparing federated and peer-to-peer protocols

Sorry, Elon haters: Mastodon still can’t replace Twitter

Six reasons Mastodon won't survive

Mastodon is crumbling—and many blame its creator

References B

Looking for Twitter alternatives? Here’s how to use Mastodon

How to use Mastodon, the Twitter alternative that’s becoming super popular

A beginner’s guide to Mastodon, the hot new open-source Twitter clone

How to Find Your Twitter Friends on Mastodon

Also published here.