In late 2019, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey announced that his company had formed a small, independent group of developers and tasked it with a single objective: to create a decentralized social media protocol that could serve as the bedrock of a new standard for online connectivity, free from corporate and governmental influence.
Twitter is funding a small independent team of up to five open source architects, engineers, and designers to develop an open and decentralized standard for social media. The goal is for Twitter to ultimately be a client of this standard. đ§”
â jack (@jack) December 11, 2019
Three years later, and after Dorseyâs own departure from Twitter, that team has emerged from relative silence to announce that it believes it has achieved its assigned goal.
On Tuesday, the Bluesky initiative launched a website for its decentralized social media protocol, which itâs calling The AT Protocol. It also opened a waitlist for the Bluesky app, which the team is framing as the ideal âbrowserâ with which to access the AT Protocol network. The waitlist quickly filled up, requiring third-party intervention.
Bluesky is building a social protocol. We released âADXâ (the X stood for Experiment) in May. Now that the design is starting to solidify, weâre renaming it to the âAuthenticated Transport Protocolâ â the âAT Protocol.â https://t.co/Q0XUF8OhVD
â bluesky (@bluesky) October 18, 2022
âSince May, weâve been doing protocol work in a public repository on GitHub, but weâve mostly been quiet on our blog and Twitter,â the Bluesky team wrote today in a blog post. âThis is starting to change.â
The AT Protocol, as a decentralized network, functions independently of the will of any single company. That independence, Bluesky believes, will allow users of social networks built atop the protocol to both protect their private data and avoid corporate algorithms that often promote controversy to keep users hooked.
âAlgorithms dictate what we see and who we can reach,â the Bluesky team wrote today. âWe must have control over our algorithms if we're going to trust in our online spaces.â
Fostering interoperation, or the mutual compatibility of different platforms across the same protocol, is also key to Bluekyâs mission. Imagine TikTok working on Instagram, for example, and vice versa. The team has developed an interoperational framework called Lexicon that will facilitate connectivity between different apps and networks built on AT Protocol.
âThe world needs a diverse market of connected services to ensure healthy competition,â the Bluesky team said. âInteroperation needs to feel like second nature to the Web.â
When Dorseyâwho congratulated the Bluesky team today on their âfoundationalâ achievement despite no longer being affiliated with the projectâfirst envisioned the groupâs potential, he stated that âthe goal is for Twitter to ultimately be a client of this standard.â
In the interim, Twitterâs ownership has endured a tumultuous saga; for months, the company has battled with Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk over Muskâs one-time, then reneged, then re-proposed offer to purchase the social media platform and take it private.
Last month, court documents produced from Twitterâs ongoing lawsuit against Musk regarding the acquisition revealed that Dorsey had exchanged texts with Musk in which he lobbied the worldâs richest man to operate Twitter as an âopen source protocol, funded by a foundation.â
In those text messages, Dorsey made his caseâthe same case made when announcing the creation of Blueskyâabout the dangers inherent to operating a social media platform on a profit-based model.
âIt canât have an advertising model,â Dorsey wrote to Musk. Doing so would give governments and corporations an access point to control discourse, Dorsey elaborated. âIf it has a centralized entity behind [it], it will be attacked.â
The AT Protocolâs debut comes at a time when political polarization, among other factors, has led to the splintering and critique of social media platforms like Twitter and their policies. On Monday, controversial musician and public figure Kanye âYeâ West agreed in principle to acquire right-leaning social media company Parler, days after the entertainer was suspended from Instagram and Twitter for making antisemitic remarks.