Bluesky, a decentralized social network, publicly criticised X after owner Elon Musk admitted issues with the platform’s recommendation system.
The exchange began when user Janette Fenway asked why her feed was “suddenly flooded with lefty lawmakers spouting nonsense,” and tagged Musk. He replied, “Because we are failing very badly with the recommendation algorithm. Doing my best to address this.”
Bluesky used the moment to warn about the risk of a single company deciding what millions see. In a post, the network said: “X openly saying they tip the scales and choose what you see. Instead of taking sides based on whose team won the last cycle, we need to fix the structural problem of one boss making the decisions, history shows us where that leads.”
The firm contrasted its model with X’s. Bluesky lets users and outside developers pick or build their own recommendation systems. That gives people more choice than a single, central algorithm controlled by one owner.
Observers say Musk’s reply was seen as an admission that X’s system is not working well and remains tightly controlled. Supporters of decentralised networks argue this central control is a threat to fair public discussion. They say systems that let users choose algorithms reduce that risk.
No technical details were given about how X will fix the problem. The debate highlights a wider concern over who decides what content appears on major platforms, and whether central control serves the public interest.
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