For the previous few days, my Bluesky feed has been more and more full of mysterious posts about waffles.
The back-and-forth appears to have began with a tongue-in-cheek submit by Jerry Chen lampooning a type of social media sanctimoniousness that’s develop into all too recognizable on Bluesky: “(bluesky person bursts into Waffle Home) OH SO YOU HATE PANCAKES??”
Bluesky CEO Jay Graber quoted this approvingly, including, “Too actual. We’re going to attempt to repair this. Social media doesn’t should be this manner.” One other person then requested, “have y’all banned Jesse Singal but or” to which Graber merely replied, “WAFFLES!”
Singal’s presence on Bluesky was a flashpoint final 12 months — whereas Bluesky constructed an early status as a haven for trans customers, Singal has been broadly criticized for his writing on trans points. A Change.org petition arguing that Singal violated the social community’s group tips and calling on Bluesky to ban him acquired greater than 28,000 signatures, and he was the most-blocked person on Bluesky till Vice President JD Vance surpassed him.

In a follow-up submit, Graber wrote, “Harassing the mods into banning somebody has by no means labored. And harassing individuals usually has by no means modified their thoughts.” She additionally alluded to the controversy by posting a nudge-nudge wink-wink photograph of waffles, as did Singal.
Customers continued to criticize her, with Graber firing again — when one in contrast the criticism to a buyer threatening to cancel their service, she requested, “Are you paying us? The place?” When one other steered that she ought to apologize, Graber mentioned, “You might attempt a poster’s strike. I hear that works.”
It is perhaps tempting to dismiss this entire factor as one other instance of leftist infighting, particularly because the Bluesky Discourse has already moved on to the query of whether or not “clanker” is a slur.
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Or possibly, as one satirical account steered, there’s simply been “a week-long fuel leak at Bluesky HQ.”
However the controversy additionally underlines ongoing tensions between the corporate and a few of its most vocal customers. It’s a pressure that might be seen final month in skeptical responses to the corporate’s up to date group tips, and in recurring complaints that Bluesky has been too fast to ban Palestinian and trans customers, whereas providing leniency to large accounts like Singal’s.
It could be simplistic to scale back this pressure to a single trigger, however I think a lot of it comes from differing visions about what makes Bluesky particular: For those who assume it’s Bluesky’s group, particularly that early group of marginalized customers, then it could really feel like a betrayal when Bluesky executives appear unwilling to face up for these customers.
One person who posts underneath the identify Katie Tightpussy speculated that Bluesky management has come to detest “having a big social media app that they by no means wished” and steered that they spin it off to allow them to return “to Protocol Land the place they by no means have to consider the opinions of plebeians ever once more.”
Certainly, when Graber isn’t responding to criticism with posts about waffles, she’s resisted figuring out Bluesky with any particular group or political leaning, as an alternative emphasizing the decentralized protocol that permits customers to construct their very own options.
Amidst the present controversy, she posted about “decentralization acceleration” and wrote, “We’re system architects at core. We constructed a decentralized community so you may run your individual moderation,” then steered that the corporate’s “upcoming wholesome discourse undertaking is taking some swings on the interplay mannequin that drives these dynamics on Bluesky.”
Graber could even have foreseen some model of this battle when Bluesky was beginning out with imaginative and prescient of a decentralized system that permits customers emigrate elsewhere in the event that they’re sad with firm management. As she reportedly wrote in Bluesky’s founding paperwork, “The corporate is a future adversary.”