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BlueskyBusinessTech

Bluesky taps Toni Schneider as interim CEO

Bluesky is handing the CEO job to Toni Schneider while founder Jay Graber shifts into a future‑focused innovation role.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 11, 2026, 3:35 AM EDT
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Toni Schneider
Photo: True Ventures
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Bluesky is reshuffling its top leadership at a moment when the once‑niche Twitter alternative has quietly grown into a 40‑million‑user social network, and the way it handles this transition will say a lot about what comes next for decentralized social media. On March 9, the company announced that venture capitalist and longtime open‑web operator Toni Schneider is stepping in as interim CEO, while founding chief executive Jay Graber moves into a new role as Chief Innovation Officer focused on the long‑term future of Bluesky’s underlying AT Protocol.

The change doesn’t come out of nowhere. In a blog post on Bluesky’s site, Schneider explains that he has spent most of his career around open platforms like WordPress, Automattic, Yahoo’s developer network and Bandcamp, and has been both an investor and advisor to Bluesky for the past two years. He writes that he originally approached decentralized social with skepticism, after watching past projects stall or fragment, but became convinced when he saw Bluesky’s technical architecture and the AT Protocol that powers it. That mix of initial doubt and eventual conviction matters because Schneider is inheriting a network that has already cleared one of the hardest hurdles in social media: getting to meaningful scale without abandoning its founding principles.

Graber, for her part, is not leaving the company she has spent nearly five years building. In a series of posts and statements, she frames the move as a shift in focus rather than an exit, saying Bluesky now needs an experienced operator to handle scaling and execution while she doubles down on what she does best: imagining and building the next wave of technology and product. She will now serve as Chief Innovation Officer, concentrating on Bluesky’s long‑term roadmap and the evolution of the protocol, rather than the day‑to‑day grind of running a rapidly growing consumer app. It’s a pattern that has played out at other tech companies when they hit a certain size, but in Bluesky’s case, it also signals that the company believes the core idea has been validated and the main challenge is execution at scale.

If you zoom out, the timing of this move lines up with Bluesky’s recent growth spurt. The company’s latest transparency report shows that Bluesky grew nearly 60 percent in 2025, jumping from about 26 million to more than 41 million users across its federated network. Alongside that user growth, Bluesky and the wider AT Protocol ecosystem now count more than 500 active apps, ranging from alternative clients to tools that tap into its open data pipes. In other words, this is no longer just a small experimental community on the edge of social media; it’s a real platform with real scaling, moderation, and regulatory challenges, plus a developer ecosystem that expects stability and clear direction.

That context helps explain why the board and Graber are turning to someone with Schneider’s specific resume. Before joining True Ventures, Schneider ran Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com, which grew up on the idea that publishing should be open and user‑controlled but still usable by non‑technical people. He’s familiar with the tension between being a company with employees, investors, and a roadmap, and being the steward of a broader open ecosystem that can’t just be locked down for short‑term gains. At Bluesky, he is inheriting similar tradeoffs: how to keep the protocol open, let people run their own servers, and give developers power, while still offering a consumer‑grade app that feels as fast and polished as the centralized networks it competes with.

In his introductory note, Schneider is careful to reassure the three groups that probably care most about this transition: the internal team, everyday users, and developers building on AT Protocol. To employees, he frames his role as supportive rather than disruptive, saying his job is to help the team keep doing what’s already working instead of tearing things up for the sake of it. To users, he emphasizes that Bluesky’s core promise—that you own your identity, your data, and your social graph—is not changing, and that if anything, the company plans to “double down” on the open, user‑controlled model. And to developers, he promises continuity and a continued push toward a “fully decentralized” system where builders can trust the platform not to pull the rug out from under them, a concern that has haunted third‑party developers on older social networks.

The leadership change is also a reminder of where Bluesky came from and how unusual its path has been. The project started inside Twitter in 2019 under Jack Dorsey as an internal skunkworks effort to create a new standard for decentralized social networking. It later spun out as an independent company, with Graber stepping up as CEO in 2021 and guiding Bluesky through the turbulent period when Elon Musk acquired Twitter (now X) and many users and developers started looking for alternatives. Under her leadership, Bluesky moved from an abstract proposal for a protocol to a running social network built on AT Protocol, with invite‑only growth turning into a broader opening as the platform matured. That journey, from internal experiment to independent protocol‑driven company to one of the most prominent Twitter successors, is a key part of why this CEO transition feels significant beyond just one startup’s org chart.

For people watching the decentralized social space, the move raises a few big questions. First, can Bluesky scale without compromising on its protocol‑first philosophy, especially now that it has tens of millions of users and more mainstream attention? Second, will Schneider’s operator mindset mean faster product shipping—features, safety tools, better onboarding—while Graber pushes the protocol into more ambitious territory, like richer app types or new moderation and algorithmic frameworks. And third, how will Bluesky differentiate itself in a world where other protocols like ActivityPub (used by Mastodon and Threads) are also competing to be the backbone of the next social web?

What’s clear from both the company’s own messaging and outside reporting is that this isn’t a crisis handover. Graber is staying, has a defined new remit, and will help select the permanent CEO once the board finishes its search. Bluesky’s board has framed Schneider’s appointment as interim CEO as a way to bridge the gap between the scrappy early stage and the more mature phase, where questions around revenue, regulation, and global operations start to dominate. For users, that likely means more emphasis on making Bluesky feel like a stable, everyday product rather than a perpetual beta, while for the protocol community, it could mean stronger guarantees that the underlying AT stack will remain open and interoperable even as the main app and business evolve.

If you’re already on Bluesky, you may not notice any sudden change tomorrow—the app will look the same, your timeline will still be full of the same posts, and the AT Protocol will continue humming in the background. But leadership shifts like this tend to show their impact over months and years, in the kinds of features that get prioritized, the way moderation is handled, how the company talks to regulators, and how welcoming it is to third‑party builders. With Schneider “coming off the bench,” as he puts it, and Graber heading back to the lab to focus on innovation, Bluesky is effectively betting that it can professionalize without becoming just another locked‑down platform—and that may be the most important test of all for a company trying to remake how social media works.


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