YOU may have heard some buzz about a new social network called Bluesky, which is the latest app trying to seize the throne once occupied by Twitter. Here in the States, journalists are going wild for Bluesky – publications from TechCrunch to The New Yorker have covered its hip culture, analysing whether it is a sign of what’s to come in the world of social media. I have been on Bluesky for about a month now, and so far it feels like a fast-motion replay of everything that went wrong on Twitter. It has only taken months, rather than …
Related Posts
-
AI-driven race cars test limits of autonomous driverless technology
adminMay 3, 2024 -
Politicians can use social media ads to buy votes for €4 per person
adminMay 2, 2024 -
Most brain monitors sold to consumers don’t keep your data private
adminMay 1, 2024 -
Australia places A$1 billion bet on quantum computing firm PsiQuantum
adminApril 30, 2024 -
Ships smuggling Russian oil spotted in satellite images by AI
adminApril 27, 2024 -
Why curbing chatbots’ worst exploits is a game of whack-a-mole
adminApril 26, 2024