I don't think Bluesky will succeed unless it offers something different to the basic Twitter experience. It's hard to picture enough people giving up Twitter (or using both) for it to reach the critical mass required to sustain it.
What an amazing story!
I've realised I don't actually care about people using it for programming or brainstorming or whatever. It's just I feel so inslulted when I read something that is in the default AI voice.
So I don't know that I agree entirely with the writer of the piece but I get where he's coming from. AI writing is unpleasant to read. And I hope Medium reverses their decision.
I remember finding clips I'd never seen requested by people on /r/DailyShow just based on their description but then at some point Google changed focus from finding stuff to answering questions and while the close captions were still in the source of the videos' pages, they weren't coming up on Google searches.
Now you can't even watch the episodes. It makes me sad, how much the internet has changed and continues to change but I guess change is inevitable.
There is a torrent of all the Jon episodes of The Daily Show and maybe the other things the article mentions are similarly archived by a handful of enthusiasts but I still think it's sad.
I thought training LLMs on content created by LLMs was ill-advised but this would suggest otherwise