Bluesky is Netherlandsworking on giving users a little more control over their privacy. The company published a proposal on Githuboutlining the changes the company is thinking of making to that end.
“This draft describes how atproto accounts (eg, Bluesky users) could declare ‘intents’ (aka, preferences) about certain categories of reuse of their public content. The mechanism and expectations are similar to robots.txt files on the web: a machine-readable format, which good actors are expected to abide, and does carry ethical weight, but is not legally enforceable”
That is quite a bit of technical speech, but the meaning is pretty clear. Robots.txt is a file most websites have—including this one—that tells robots that scrape the Internet what they can and cannot do with the data they find along the way. Bluesky would implement settings that would allow users to tell those same bots what they can and cannot do with their Bluesky data.
SEE ALSO: Can stan Twitter be recreated on Bluesky? Swifties think so.It gets a little sticky because robots.txt is a suggestion rather than a hard rule. However, as it stands right now, Bluesky is a public website, and as such, generative AI platforms and other forms of data scraping, like Google Search, have free reign over what they find there.
Bluesky head honcho Jay Graber talked briefly about this at South by Southwest last week, but the discussion got more attention when Graber posted about it on Blueskyon Friday. Per Techcrunch, some users were initially alarmed until Graber explained the situationmore succinctly.
"Gen AI companies are already scraping public data from across the web, and everything on Bluesky is public like a website is public," Graber said. "But in the history of the open web, standards like robots.txt emerged that most search engines came to respect. This is a proposal to create a new, similar standard."
Companies scraping the World Wide Web for use in training generative AI is a controversy as old as the technology, and many digital denizens have been trying to prevent AI from learning based on their content. Some companies, like Meta, have been accused of using untoward methods of training AI models, up to and including piracy.
It’s a reality that Graber has been staunchly against. Last week at SXSW, Graber wore a T-shirt that read Mundus sine Caesaribus ("A world without Caesars" in Latin), taking a dig at a similar T-shirt Mark Zuckerberg wore that read Aut Zuck aut nihil ("Zuck or nothing").
Bluesky sold Graber's Mundus T-shirt on its website, which sold out in minutes.
Topics Privacy Bluesky
I See the World by Jamaica KincaidRedux: You Would If by The Paris ReviewThe Year of Grinding Teeth by Madeleine WattsMark Twain’s Mind Waves by Chantel TattoliStaff Picks: Heaven, Hearing Trumpets, and Hong SangWhat Writers and Editors Do by Karl Ove KnausgaardThe Great Writer Who Never Wrote by Emma GarmanStaff Picks: Land Mines, Laugh Tracks, and Ladies in Satin by The Paris ReviewThe Eleventh Word by Lulu MillerOn Jean Valentine by Hafizah GeterThe Fabulous Forgotten Life of Vita SackvilleWhy Do We Keep Reading ‘The Great Gatsby’?Beatlemania in Yugoslavia by Slavenka DrakulićInside the American Snow Dome by Jamaica KincaidThe Art of Distance No. 34 by The Paris ReviewEverybody’s Breaking Somebody’s Heart by Drew BratcherWhy Do We Keep Reading ‘The Great Gatsby’?A Little Patch of Something by Imani PerryThe Art of Distance No. 37 by The Paris ReviewThe Unreality of Time by Elisa Gabbert Google will introduce self FCC leaks photos of unreleased gold iPhone X Medium app release notes make fun of Mark Zuckerberg's testimony Why is Thanos such a big deal in 'Avengers: Infinity War'? Scrabble adds 300 words to its official dictionary Did Mark Zuckerberg just beat Congress? Hurricanes will never be named Harvey, Irma, or Maria again After 14 years, Steam gets some decent privacy settings Toddler scares the crap out of her mom in the most innocent way possible Mark Zuckerberg tells Congress that someone will be in touch FCC filing shows Google Ditch the cable forever with these smashing Amazon deals on wireless headphones No girl's period should force her to miss school, and this startup is making sure of that Elon Musk blames Tesla Model 3 'production hell' on over Uber rolls out new features for biking, car Tesla's Autopilot fails haven't shaken my faith in self Uber Rent car A first look at 'Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery' mobile game Samsung CHG90 49 Zuckerberg says Facebook won't comply with ICE's 'extreme vetting'
2.2961s , 10130.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Netherlands】,Openness Information Network