Bluesky CEO Jay Graber Explains How the Social Platform Thrives Without Ads

Woman in black shirt sits in chair onstage behind purple screen
Jay Graber, head of Bluesky, pictured at Web Summit Vancouver 2025 on May 27. Sam Barnes/Web Summit via Sportsfile via Getty Images

Bluesky, the social networking platform gaining traction as a popular alternative to X, is positioning itself as a hub for personalized—and often niche—online communities. According to CEO Jay Graber, that same focus on customization is what allows Bluesky users to escape the echo chambers that dominate traditional social media.

“You can really just silo in the corner you want to be in,” said Graber during a talk at Web Summit Vancouver yesterday (May 27). Still, features like custom feeds and Bluesky starter packs—which curate lists of users centered on specific interests—can also encourage users to branch out. Graber noted she’s explored communities centered around fountain pens, medical studies, and even commodities trading.

Bluesky users have the option to build timelines that are entirely randomized or intentionally filled with perspectives different from their own. In one instance, an early adopter experimented by randomly sorting users into teams and creating separate feeds to showcase posts from each group, Graber said.

How a site with 35 million users is run by just 25 people

Despite its rapid expansion, Bluesky operates with a lean team of just 25 employees, who manage the demands of a budding social media platform in part through strategic delegation. Earlier this year, the company launched a verification system for notable accounts—but it also introduced a “Trusted Verifier” program, enabling approved organizations such as The New York Times and Wired to verify users themselves. “You can have a system that builds more points of trust than just the one that we hold as a company,” said Graber.

Another key difference setting Bluesky apart from its competitors is its stance against traditional advertising. Instead, the company plans to monetize through a marketplace of related services and, eventually, user subscriptions. Its decentralized, open-source structure—which allows users to take their data with them or build parallel networks if dissatisfied—serves as a built-in safeguard against the kind of profit-first decisions, like ad-based models, that Graber said run counter to the company’s mission.

According to Graber, this approach mirrors the open structure of the web itself, where users can install ad blockers or switch search engines whenever they choose. “Creating these constraints for ourselves at the beginning means that we get more creative about how we’re approaching this problem,” she said.

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