AI NewsBluesky leans into AI with Attie, an app for building custom feeds
Bluesky leans into AI with Attie, an app for building custom feeds
5:28 AM IST ¡ March 29, 2026

The team from Bluesky has built another app â and this time, itâs not a social network, but an AI assistant that allows you to design your own algorithm, create custom feeds, and, one day, vibe-code your own app. At the Atmosphere conference over the weekend, Blueskyâsformer CEO, Jay Graber, now chief innovation officer, andBluesky CTO Paul Frazee, presented the AI app, called Attie, for the first time. Conference attendees will become the initial beta testers for the new experience, which leverages Anthropicâs Claude under the hood to create an agentic social app built on Blueskyâs underlying protocol, the AT Protocol (or atproto for short). âItâs a new product â itâs not a part of the Bluesky app,â explains interim CEO Toni Schneider in an interview. (In addition to his CEO role, Schneider is a partner at Bluesky backer True Ventures.) âWeâve launched a lot of things inside Bluesky â Starter Packs and custom feeds, and all those kinds of things. This is a standalone product, and itâs the first one thatâs built by Jayâs new team.â With Attie, anyone will be able to build their own custom feed just by typing in commands in natural language, the same as if theyâre chatting with any other AI chatbot. To use the app, people will sign in with their Atmosphere login (meaning their login for any app that runs on atproto, which includes Bluesky). Attie will immediately understand what youâve been talking about, what sort of things you like, and more, because Bluesky and the wider ecosystem are open systems that share data across apps. You can ask Attie questions, like what posts you might like to see or repost, and you can use the app to curate your own custom feed, personalized to you. âYou control it, you shape it, without having to write code or know how to set up these feeds,â Schneider says. âItâs the beginning of just having a lot more people be able to build on top of the Atmosphere.â Plus, he adds, âIt is an AI product, but itâs an AI product thatâs very people-focused ⌠We think AI is a very powerful technology, but we want to make sure that we use it to build things that really benefit people.â At launch, Attie can be used to build and view these feeds, which will later become available to you within Bluesky or any other atproto app. Over time, the plan is to allow Attieâs users to vibe-code their own social apps as well as build tools for other people. Schneider says that Graber and her team began working on the app a few months ago, which was around the same time she decided to return to building, instead of running the company. âI think she realized that there was so much more that she wanted to build, and just doing the CEO job kept her busy, and she felt like she wanted more time,â Schneider tells TechCrunch. âAs she spent more time, [and] got freed up, I think it became clear that this is her happy place. Sheâs an amazing leader and visionary, and we want her building more things and not worrying about operating the company,â he says. Graber says today, AI is being used by the major platforms to serve themselves, not their users, by trying to increase peopleâs time spent in their apps, harvesting data, and controlling their algorithms. âWe think AI should serve people, not platforms,â Graber said in her announcement of Attie. âAn open protocol puts this power directly in usersâ hands. You can use it to build your own feeds, create software that works the way you want it to, and find signal in the noise.â Graberâs decision to once again focus on protocol and product was followed by the companyâs announcement that itnow has $100 million in additional fundingfrom a round that closed last year. The team hopes that news serves as a signal to the wider community that Bluesky will continue to be around. âIt means we have three-plus years of runway, which is great. That means stability and security for the rest of the ecosystem,â Schneider tells TechCrunch. It also means that Blueskyâs team has time to tackle the bigger challenges ahead, which include adding privacy controls to the protocol and finding a way to monetize the social network of43.4 millionusers. One thing that Schneider assures us is not in the works, however, is any crypto integration â despite the financial backing from multiple crypto investors. Thatâs something that had worried some Bluesky users, who feared the app would be filled with crypto scams or become a payment tool. âItâs the kind of investors who were attracted to crypto because of its decentralization, and they were investing in things built on the blockchain that were super decentralized,â Schneider says of Blueskyâs backers in the crypto space. âThis is decentralized social, so it fits those who are invested to believe in the platform and the ecosystem opportunity.â Instead, the company may experiment with other means of monetization. The team hasnât yet decided if Attie will ultimately require a fee, as itâs only a private beta for the time being. Other ideas being batted around include subscriptions and hosting services for those who want to host their own communities on the protocol. Schneider, the former CEO of Automattic, the home of publishing platform WordPress.com, sees the potential for the Atmosphere as being similar to WordPress in this way. âAt the center of [the Atmosphere] is a completely open system, so anybody can participate,â he says. âYou can have all of these independent, decentralized pieces that work together. With WordPress, that turned into a huge ecosystem with billions of dollars â over $10 billion a year, now â flowing through it.â Schneider continues, âSo itâs gotten very big, even though itâs completely decentralized. And this is what weâre hoping for, for the Atmosphere to have that similar ability for lots of these apps and services to coexist and work together and build an ecosystem.â
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