Stop Begging Big Tech To Fix Your Social Media Experience. You Can Do It Yourself.
from the vibe-code-your-social-experience dept
Disclaimer: This post talks about Bluesky and an offering from Bluesky and I am on the Bluesky board. Take everything I say with whatever size grains of salt you feel is appropriate.
I’ve written a few times now about how I think that AI tools, used carefully and thoughtfully, represent our best chance at taking back control over the open web. I know this is not a popular opinion with many Techdirt readers, but I’m hoping some of you will read through this to try to understand and engage with the points I’m making here. I truly do believe that if used well and appropriately, these tools can serve to put power back into the hands of users, rather than giant centralized companies who are more interested in exploiting your attention.
Over the last few weeks I’ve been playing around with an AI-powered tool that Bluesky has released (much to the chagrin of many users) to a relatively small group of early beta testers. I think the negative reaction to the product announcement is understandable, given the general distrust of all AI tools, but it’s really worth examining what this tool is and what it can enable, including really empowering people to take back control over their own social experience. It literally gives you a path to routing around Bluesky’s own design features if you don’t like them.
Yes, a lot of AI is overhyped garbage being shoved at people who don’t want it — but that doesn’t mean the underlying tools can’t be useful when applied carefully by those who choose to use the tools appropriately.
It means not outsourcing your brain to the tool, but rather using it the way any skilled person automates some aspect of work that they do. I’ve sanded and restained the floors of my house, and while I could have done the whole thing by hand with a stack of sandpaper, it was helpful to rent a floor sander from a local hardware store, learn how to use it properly, and then use it so that I could finish the job in a day rather than weeks. I view AI tools the same way. If you learn how to use them properly, as an assistive tool rather than a replacement for your brain, they can help you accomplish useful things.
Let me give an example: a couple of weeks ago, law professor Blake Reid wrote a short thread on Bluesky about how he needed to take a break from social media, because he worried that it was eating up too much of his time and he was better off just stopping cold turkey, to avoid getting sucked into unproductive discussions that push him to (as he put it) “get over my skis” in engaging in conversations where he’s tempted to weigh in despite not having much expertise (a common thing on social media). It’s a worthwhile thread.
But in that thread he mentioned that he was hopeful that maybe some day technology itself could help him use social media in a healthier way, to dial back how much time he spent on it, and get him focused on the more productive and useful discussions (which he admits also happen regularly on Bluesky).
What was amusing to me was that the only reason I saw that post by Reid was because I’ve been beta testing a new tool that… kinda does that. When he wrote that thread, I was actually on vacation, hiking in the National Parks in Utah, and mostly offline. But in the evenings, I would check in, and rather than sorting through everything I missed on social media that day, I had a tool just show me things that I would find useful that I might have missed.
But using an AI tool, I had built an entirely personalized news aggregator, which had access to my Bluesky account, Techdirt’s RSS feed, and the knowledge that I had been out all day and wanted not just a summary of what news might be interesting to me as the editor of Techdirt, but also what people on Bluesky were saying about it. Here’s a screenshot of what my first attempt at this looks like:

The tool that let me do this is an advanced version of Attie, which I also recognize is extremely controversial among users on Bluesky, many of whom vocally have expressed their hatred of the very idea of it when it was announced last month. But, my main interest is in figuring out to empower users who want to take control over their own social experience, and this seems like a clear example of that. I’ll note that this version of Attie has not yet rolled out to most of the beta testers (I believe some have access to it — but this is one small benefit of being on the board).
Honestly, I think the way Bluesky announced Attie may have done it an injustice, positioning it as a kind of AI-powered feed generator. There are multiple other feed generator tools for Bluesky out there, many of which are really fantastic. For a while now I’ve used both Graze.social and Surf.social to make AI-powered feeds (which never seemed to generate much controversy).
But generating feeds alone isn’t all that interesting. With the more advanced version of Attie, I can take much more control over my entire social experience. The fact that with a single prompt I could build that personalized aggregator (based not just on my own feed, but Techdirt’s RSS) is something more powerful, including the fact that the tool knows to summarize a whole days’ worth of posts, because I’m trying to see in a glance if there’s anything relevant for Techdirt and I’d been offline the entire day.
Rather than just letting a single company (in this case Bluesky) define my entire experience for me, I can vibe-code my social experience. I can tell it not just the types of content I want to see, but how I want to see it. And for what reason. And how much (or how little) content to show me. And with what context around it. It’s all based on what I expressly want. Not what any company thinks I want.
And I keep experimenting with other versions of this as well. In one test, I had it also try to summarize stories and tell me why it thought I’d find them useful for Techdirt:

In this case it not only found a story that is interesting to me, but it suggested multiple sources for me to read about it, even noting (for example) that Professor Eric Goldman’s blog post is “the definitive blog post” for my coverage (it’s not wrong).
I go back to the piece I wrote a little while back about the kind of learned helplessness of social media users. We’ve had two decades of billionaires deciding exactly how they wanted to intermediate your social experience. How your feed looks. What kind of algorithm you’ll see. What sorts of content will be put in your feed. They got to focus on engagement maxxing. You just had to deal with it.
In such a world, the only thing users felt they could do in response was to yell. They could yell at the CEOs of these platforms. Or at the government, telling them to yell at the CEOs of these platforms.
But with an AI tool that explores an open social ecosystem, you don’t need to yell at a CEO or a regulator. You can just tell the tool what you want, what you don’t want, how you want (or don’t want) to see it, and what context would be useful. It puts you in control.
And yes, sometimes it makes mistakes. It can recommend a story I’m not interested in. But, then I can just tell it that such and such story isn’t useful and why… and it will update the system for me.
Once again, I understand that some people hate any and all uses of AI. And I’m not suggesting you have to run out and use the tools yourself. You do you. But showing concrete use cases where these tools actually deliver more user agency — more control over your online environment, rather than deferring to the whims of any particular company — matters.
The larger point here isn’t really about Attie specifically (indeed, anyone could build their own version of this thanks to open protocols). It’s that for two decades, users have been trained to believe their only options are to accept whatever a platform gives them, or yell loudly enough that someone powerful might change it. That’s the learned helplessness I wrote about earlier, and it’s corrosive.
Tools like this — built on open protocols, not locked inside a corporate walled garden — represent a different path. One where you don’t petition a billionaire for a better feed algorithm. You don’t petition the government to try to put time limits on social media. You just build the experience you want. You tell it to make you a better interface that matches what you want. You tell it you don’t want to spend that much time. That’s what “protocols, not platforms” actually looks like in practice, helped along by agentic tools, and it’s why I think this matters well beyond whether any particular AI tool is good or not.
Filed Under: ai, attie, custmization, decentralization, vibe coding
Companies: bluesky


Comments on “Stop Begging Big Tech To Fix Your Social Media Experience. You Can Do It Yourself.”
How about a payment?
Micropayments for each of us whenever our data is desired would be:
(Anyone good at estimating data requests on the web x a micropayment x 1 year? What would the cost of one average internet user’s data be for a day/year?)
I mean, personally, I’d rather they provide a service that I enjoy and need rather than providing one that no-one enjoys, and the free market doesn’t seem to actually be fixing it.
A public solution or a public-partnership might be necessary, profit motives and public forums don’t really mix.
I don’t actually see anything wrong with governments sponsoring select social media services, in exchange for removing some predatory and unpleasant habits that modern social media have developed, much like PBS did for television.
"knowledge that I had been out all day and wanted ..."
Presuming this is an LLM, it does not have “knowledge.” Explaining more clearly what criteria you gave it might get you somewhere. As it is, you look like yet another person who has mistaken “doing approximately what I asked for” for “understanding me andacting on my request.”
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Fair point on the colloquial use of “knowing.” To me it’s all context. These tools are much more useful if they’re given enough context to give you non-generic answers. In this case, among the context that it had was the fact that I had been offline and the purpose of me wanting to see the page was to catch up quickly on what I had misssed.
Honestly Attie sounds kind of silly and dumb and I’d never use it, but as long as its use is optional then its mere existence is always a net positive because maybe for somebody its use case is better than nothing, and it raises the bar for competition to “must be better than this.”
Tools are tools
I’ve seen AI help find answers that I could probably have found, but it would have taken hours. Yes, I still double checked, but now I had a possible answer.
Any tool can be misused. The more $ that can be made by misusing it, the more likely it will happen.
Search Engines had/have the same problem, you can’t just blindly trust them and when they start shoving info at you, object loudly and look for that rock that was more than a hammer.
Interesting choice to publish this on the day the rest of Bluesky is cackling about being blocked by Why after he subscribed to an AI haters blocklist.
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I guess they got tired of being asked about their phone.
Nice Attie ad, does Bluesky have an edit button yet? And shouldn’t getting the basic features working and making Bluesky easier to set up your own instances of, driven the claims that decentralisation is a vital part of the mission, be more important than adding AI tools the users never asked for, or the dev team engaging with feuds with the user base and doing things like mass blocking critics of AI like Why?
Again, as with all the other pro AI pieces here, there is no thought put in to why people object to Ai tools and their use, like with crypto we keep being told ‘this use may be good, actually!’ and it never is, the ethical and ecological costs are handwaved away or ignored entirely because having a toy to play with is the only thing that matters, and on the rare occasions the costs are mentioned, there’s always a suggestion of a plan to make the effort to plan to fix them down the line, on which no work is ever done. Acknowledging the hate isn’t addressing it, not really, and doing nothing to fix it, yet again the pro AI stance is a marketing pitch for what you were always going to do, with a ‘We hear you!’ tacked on in the hope it’ll make people shut up about the real issues involved.
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Related: Does Bluesky allow people to mute reposts from individual accounts, a feature that both Twitter and Mastodon have, rather than force people to mute reposts altogether?
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Mike has drunk the AI Flavor-Aid in a way that he simply never drank the Flavor-Aid for Crypto and NFTs. He kind of just shuffled away from being a booster for the NFT stuff consequence-free and never seemed to have even bothered publishing that NFT paper he took money to write, Newly Finite Themes.
But with AI, Mike seems to have gone all-in. And between the AI boosting that Timothy and Mike do, and minimal attention paid to externalities while touting vibe-coding and ignoring Bluesky’s myriad issues that would be stories on here if it were literally any other social media site, it feels like Techdirt has lost a lot of credibility.
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So, like, when Mike or another Techdirt staff member flags a post, does it just instantly count as however many flags you need to hide a comment? Cause my comment feels like it got dinged and hidden awfully fast after I posted it.
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Apparently Bluesky thinks it’s Mozilla. How cute.
Yes, a lot of AI is overhyped garbage being shoved at people who don’t want it — but that doesn’t mean the underlying tools can’t be useful when applied carefully by those who choose to use the tools appropriately.
It means not outsourcing your brain to the tool, but rather using it the way any skilled person automates some aspect of work that they do. I’ve sanded and restained the floors of my house, and while I could have done the whole thing by hand with a stack of sandpaper, it was helpful to rent a floor sander from a local hardware store, learn how to use it properly, and then use it so that I could finish the job in a day rather than weeks. I view AI tools the same way. If you learn how to use them properly, as an assistive tool rather than a replacement for your brain, they can help you accomplish useful things.
I feel like this is a misreading of how much effort it’s a going to require to rapidly change how the always-online crowd engages with social media to start with, let alone make it more usable for less technical users that don’t grasp what is going on under the hood.
It’s nice to know the vibe coding aspect has strict limits and guardrails to what kinds of feed generation it can build but still misses the fact that more speech can often mean less speech unless the curation tools can ratio baf faith/disruptive people faster and not just filter them out.
Social media companies built their own scaling problems and AI shouldn’t be considered an out to moderation responsibility resulting from the scaling.
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The stuff people are calling “A.I.” isn’t actually intelligent at all. That’s part of the hype.
The very best social media
Unplug
What I would like is some ability to block all the AI slop content on youtube.
I’d like to continue letting my kid watch the videos she likes on there (I do watch what they do, which is why I know about all the AI slop on there), while not having to sift through the junk.
I've actually studied AI, and I strongly disagree
That’s “studied” as in graduate school at a major university, and “studied” as in under professors who wrote some of the most-used textbooks on the subject. I’m not as proficient in some parts of it as others, but I’ve written my own modest systems and well, they work.
It’s already by noted by other posters that the societal cost of AI is enormous and is being forced on everyone whether they use it or not, whether they want it or not. It’s doing massive environmental damage, it’s disrupting neighborhoods, it’s stressing power grids and forcing electricity prices up, it’s using way too much water, it’s raising the temperature in surrounding areas, it’s polluting the air, and more. (If you don’t already know about these, I have a few hundred links to articles, reports, etc. that I can share.) It’s doing massive damage to the Internet and computing: the prices of disks, memory, and CPUs have gone through the roof; millions of web sites have been hammered by their abusive crawlers; it’s being forced into every product and service without the consent of the people using it and increasingly being hardwired so that it can’t be turned off. It’s a security and privacy disaster that impacts everyone.
And it’s a plagiarism machine built on stolen copyrighted material — and no, it is NOT fair use. And on top of that the CEOs of these companies are psycopathic, sociopathic assholes who simply don’t care who they hurt or kill — which is why ChatGPT keeps talking people into suicide or coaching them on how to conduct mass shootings. They don’t care what they damage or destroy, e.g., they’ve wrecked the US educational system at every level. (Again: I have hundreds of links if any of this has escaped your reading.)
Bottom line: nobody should be using these. It’s unprofessional and unethical.
It’s also unnecessary. Filtering/sorting approaches, including collaborative ones, have been around for decades. Two that I can cite offhand (because I have the references handy) are:
NewsView: A Recommender System for Usenet based on FAST Data Search from 2004, and
GroupLens: applying collaborative filtering to Usenet news from 1997.
That’s almost 30 years ago, and there were efforts before that, I just can’t come up with the references at the moment.
These systems work quite well for two reasons: first, the people who came up with them actually did their homework, thought through the problem, and designed and built elegant systems to solve it…instead of being intellectually lazy and trying to brute-force it with acres of computers.
Second, Usenet was designed by people who actually did their homework in the same way. It’s just as elegant for the same reason, and one important feature of its design is that it was deliberately built not only to facilitate, but to encourage exactly this kind of innovation. That’s not an accident: it was built by people intimately familiar with the Unix system and philosophy, including the Software Tools (that’s a book) approach.
Usenet was a federated social media system in 1979. That’s 47 years ago. And the ignorant newbies who built Bluesky (and the rest) have completely failed to learn from it, which is one reason why they made the amazing design blunder of standardizing on a protocol instead of on files.
Email was a federated social media system by 1975. That’s 51 years ago. (And if you’re wondering why I picked 1975, it’s because SF-LOVERS was running by then, and that qualifies as social media.)
So all your approach comes down to is slapping a horribly disease-infested band-aid (AI) on a poorly-designed-and-built system (Bluesky) and declaring success.
The correct answer is to get rid of both, start over, and try to do it properly this time. A good start would be spending a few years reading everything available on Usenet and mailing lists. And to give the developers computers that are at least twenty years old so that they have to learn the merits of frugality and elegance rather than just presuming infinite system resources. And to put someone in charge who’s been part of this for the past half-century, someone with the experience and wisdom to say “NO!” to every stupid idea.
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Yeah, allthose things fall way outside the scope of nuanced conversation, apparently.
But sure, one can vibe code their own attack surface why not.
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It would be great if Techdirt would stop publishing this sort of garbage from Mike Masnick. I’ve already stopped bothering with tech news sites that boost AI bullshit, maybe Techdirt can be different.
This is my only real disagreement. You’re selling it as a replacement, but it’s more a complement. AI can’t do things like force an API to be open. While it is genuinely cool and empowering, here are still situations where you need centralized power. It’s just one more tool in the toolbox.
We still need to be fighting big tech and for regulation to fix social media.
For what it’s worth, part of why Attie got backlash is precisely because it undercuts Graze, and used Bluesky team dev time. And strangely Bluesky didn’t really seem to have an answer to those concerns. AFAIK, it still hasn’t addressed the Graze controversy.
Part of it was AI concerns in general, which you can’t do much about, but it was just really tone deaf in a way that didn’t help.
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Just as a point of fact, with ATprotocol, the network itself is open. There’s no API. No one has control over the network. So there’s no need for a “centralized power” who has to “control the API.”
If your complaint is “yeah, but Facebook and X” then the answer is don’t use those services. Use the ones that are committed to being open.
tl;dr: You’re all on board with right-to-repair, right? It’s your lucky day, Bluesky has no interest in fixing problems at an institutional level but you can use AI for that!
It's the same argument every time...
“I know a lot of people distrust AI, but it can be useful! It only replaces your brain if you use it wrong!”
My personal issues with “AI” have never been how “useful” they can be. It’s the ecological, economical, developmental, and moral issues they present. All arguments that are invariably swept aside for articles like this to present one of countless use cases that are being tested and pushed into every aspect of our lives, whether we like them or not.
Nevermind that the term “AI” has been expanded to encompass not just DL models but any decently-complex algorithm. It’s all a massive mess that only works because the most powerful tech corporations are trying to blitzscale and normalize it before the major issues its cheerleaders keep ignoring and sweeping aside finally bite us all in the ass.
So no: I’m not interested in examining how “AI” can help you ignore the glaring flaws in Bluesky. And its implemention frankly makes me less interested in Bluesky as a platform.
I know you’re a journalist and so kind-of have to be that plugged in. And you’re probably into that or else you wouldn’t be in that work.
But holy shit does such a life, where such a tool is useful, sound nightmarish to me.