Bluesky CEO Jay Graber steps down after nearly five years

Jay Graber, who has led Bluesky since 2021, is stepping down as CEO. Toni Schneider will serve as interim CEO while Graber transitions to Chief Innovation Officer. The change comes as the platform, now with 43 million users, seeks to scale further.

Bluesky, the decentralized social media platform, announced that its CEO Jay Graber is stepping down after leading the company since 2021. Graber, who joined officially when Bluesky spun off as an independent entity from Twitter, guided the service through its public launch in 2023 and growth to 43 million users. The platform originated as a side project at Jack Dorsey's Twitter, ending its formal association in 2022, with Dorsey severing ties completely in 2024.

In a blog post, Graber explained the transition: "As Bluesky matures, the company needs a seasoned operator focused on scaling and execution, while I return to what I do best: building new things." She will remain influential as Chief Innovation Officer and retain a seat on Bluesky's board, which will help select a permanent CEO.

Toni Schneider, a venture capitalist and former CEO of Automattic (WordPress's parent company), will step in as interim CEO. Schneider, also a partner at True Ventures, expressed support in a Bluesky post: "I deeply believe in what this team has built and the open social web they're fighting for."

Bluesky has established a niche in the social media landscape, though it trails Meta's Threads with fewer than a third of its users. The platform has not yet introduced significant monetization, despite past mentions of a premium subscription. Graber has been noted for advocating decentralized social media.

Relaterede artikler

Tesla executive Thomas Dmytryk departs headquarters with personal box, Robotaxi and OTA tech in background.
Billede genereret af AI

Tesla director who built OTA and Robotaxi infrastructure departs after 11 years

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Thomas Dmytryk, the Tesla director responsible for developing the company's over-the-air update system and Robotaxi software backbone, has left after 11 years. His departure adds to an ongoing exodus of senior executives at the automaker. Dmytryk cited family priorities in his announcement.

Bluesky faced intermittent service disruptions on Monday, which the company attributed to an upstream service provider. Many users quickly blamed the issues on developers' use of AI-assisted 'vibe coding' tools. The outage sparked widespread memes and criticism on the platform.

Rapporteret af AI

OpenAI has hired Peter Steinberger, the developer behind the AI agent OpenClaw, to lead efforts on next-generation personal agents. Sam Altman, OpenAI's CEO, praised Steinberger's innovative ideas in an announcement on X. Steinberger confirmed he will join the company while keeping OpenClaw open-source under a foundation.

Phil Spencer, who has led Microsoft Gaming for over a decade, announced his retirement after 38 years with the company. Asha Sharma, currently heading Microsoft's CoreAI division, will succeed him as CEO of Microsoft Gaming. The changes also include the resignation of Xbox President Sarah Bond and a promotion for Matt Booty.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

Minneapolis City Council President Elliott Payne said in a Bluesky video that he had just finished a “rapid response” call that drew “about twenty people” at 10 p.m. on a Sunday, urging residents to stay connected and vigilant amid ongoing federal immigration enforcement activity.

Patrick Söderlund, founder and CEO of Embark Studios, has been named executive chairman at Nexon to guide its global strategy and growth. He will work closely with CEO Junghun Lee to set the company's direction. This move comes amid Nexon's push into live-service gaming following recent successes.

Rapporteret af AI

Microsoft Gaming has undergone a significant leadership transition with Phil Spencer retiring after nearly 40 years and Asha Sharma, previously president of CoreAI, stepping in as CEO. Xbox president Sarah Bond is also departing the company after eight years. The changes come amid ongoing challenges in the gaming division, including recent layoffs and studio closures.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis