As people have flocked to Bluesky in recent weeks, the platform has been hit with a problem as old as the internet: nudity. Among those who recently joined the decentralized social network established by Twitter cofounder and former CEO Jack Dorsey are large contingents of the tech, trans, and sex worker communities who have brought their own social norms to the chaotically exciting social platform.
Caught up in that excitement—particularly around one uncontrollable section of Bluesky called the hellthread, where a coding error meant that anyone who had participated in the thread was bombarded with notifications—many chose to share nude images of themselves.
“Things just got wacky,” says Flea, a trans Bluesky user who joined via the network’s waiting list around a month ago. “Everyone in the thread was getting notified of every post. Hundreds of people all roped together in a thread that was so broken that you couldn’t mute it.” Despite the chaos of the hellthread, Flea and others felt safe. “I could open up to these people and be vulnerable. That’s something you rarely see anymore. Especially for trans people,” she says. So she shared a flirty picture on Bluesky.
She wasn’t alone. In the chaos of the early days of Bluesky, that movement gained its own momentum, leading to a wave of nudes and lewds, many of which made their way onto the What’s Hot page, the platform’s equivalent of Twitter’s For You tab. In response to criticism from some users who didn’t want to see nudity on the What’s Hot page, Bluesky has since changed its approach, stopping any nude content being algorithmically presented to users.
The decision was encapsulated by a meme shared on the network, using a screenshot from animated sitcom King of the Hill, where one character (labeled “Bluesky users”) lifts her shirt while another (labeled “Jay,” for Bluesky CEO Jay Graber) tries to discourage them from doing so.
“It shows the challenges of moderating a growing platform in action,” says Carolina Are, an innovation fellow at the Center for Digital Citizens at Northumbria University. When platforms are in their infancy, Are says, it’s possible to take a hands-off, organically adapting approach to moderation. “But as soon as the platform grows, and as soon as it becomes more mainstream in terms of audience, there are some things that are divisive—and sadly, nudity is divisive,” she says.
The decision to limit the spread of nudity may have been affected in part by the potential future growth of Bluesky as it tries to move out of its beta phase and become a viable alternative to Twitter, according to Are, who believes Bluesky’s team could well be asking themselves questions like: “If we want to grow, and there’s a bunch of people complaining about seeing ass, will we grow if we keep allowing that?”
In many ways, Bluesky is encountering—early on in its development—a fundamental question that every online platform or presence eventually has to answer. Sexual expression is a driver of growth for online platforms, while simultaneously also being the first thing that people latch on to as unacceptable once a platform reaches any kind of critical mass.