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Bluesky Has 40 Staff. Australia’s Teen Ban Compliance Team Is Bigger Than That

Anderson Liam
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Rose Wang, Bluesky’s chief operating officer, made a simple observation at SXSW in London on Wednesday that cuts through most of the policy debate around teen social media bans: the compliance teams of the large platforms are ten times the size of Bluesky’s entire workforce. Bluesky has approximately 40 employees. Ten times that is 400 people. Meta’s trust and safety operation runs into the thousands. When regulators write teen protection requirements that apply equally to Meta, Bluesky, and every platform in between, the effect is not to burden Meta. It is to make entry into the social media market close to impossible for any company without Meta-scale resources. “We’re living in a world where it’s almost impossible for smaller entrants to come in and build healthier spaces,” Wang said. She was careful to frame this not as opposition to youth protection, but as a structural competition concern.

Australia was the first country to pass a social media ban for children under 16, which took effect in December 2025, with platforms facing fines up to $32 million Australian for violations. The law also prompted Bluesky to introduce age assurance checks to keep under-16s off its platform, according to the country’s eSafety Commissioner. Several other countries, including the United Kingdom, Spain, France, and Austria, are examining similar legislation. In the United States, state-level bans appear more likely than federal action. The common thread across all these frameworks is that they define compliance obligations primarily in terms of the infrastructure that large platforms already operate, which is what NewsTrackerToday picked up as the mechanism Wang was pointing at: compliance-by-scale accidentally becomes a moat.

Sophie Leclerc, who follows the technology sector, parses the architecture question carefully: “Bluesky’s model is genuinely different from Meta’s in a way that makes one-size regulatory compliance harder to apply fairly. Bluesky is an open protocol where third-party clients can build their own interfaces and where users have more control over their experience and data. Meta is a closed platform where all the data flows through Meta’s systems. Age verification and content moderation requirements designed for the Meta model don’t map cleanly onto a protocol model. That’s not special pleading from Wang; it’s a real architectural distinction that regulators in most countries haven’t fully addressed.” Bluesky was created inside the platform now known as X in 2019 and endorsed by co-founder Jack Dorsey, spun off in 2021, and grew to 43 million users as of March 2026.

Bear in mind that Bluesky’s own numbers are complicated. The platform reached 43 million registered users after a surge in late 2024 driven largely by political context in the United States. By the end of October 2025, daily mobile active users had reportedly fallen roughly 40% from their peak twelve months earlier. Wang’s SXSW intervention lands, in other words, at a moment when Bluesky’s argument for competitive diversity is somewhat undermined by its own trajectory. The case she is making on behalf of smaller platforms is structurally valid regardless of Bluesky’s specific fortunes, but the audience for it will notice that the company making the case is itself struggling to hold its user base, which is what NewsTrackerToday noted as the context that complicates the policy argument even when the argument is correct.

Ethan Cole reads the regulatory economics concisely: “Compliance costs are fixed in part and variable in part. Meta absorbs them across four billion users. Bluesky absorbs them across 43 million. Per-user compliance cost for Bluesky is roughly 90 times higher. That arithmetic is not a policy failure; it is a policy feature, whether intended or not.” Wang’s specific ask was for more communication channels between smaller and mid-sized platforms and regulators, arguing that smaller players need explicit protection in the regulatory design rather than being treated as scaled-down versions of platforms they cannot resemble. She ended by saying regulation is not bad, that it needs to work together with innovation. That is a reasonable enough position, but it arrives from a company that has lost 40% of its daily users and has 40 employees, which is what NewsTrackerToday zeroed in on as the uncomfortable asymmetry between Bluesky’s policy influence ambitions and its current competitive position.

The uncomfortable conclusion this week forces is not that Wang is wrong about the compliance burden. She is correct. Heavy compliance requirements do advantage incumbents. Regulatory capture does exist in tech. What the conversation avoids is the harder follow-up: if Bluesky’s product, culture, and protocol design are genuinely superior to what Meta offers, why has daily engagement fallen 40% in twelve months? The answer is almost certainly not regulatory burden. It is retention, product quality, and network effects. And what News Tracker Today connects to Wang’s SXSW remarks is the observation that even a perfectly level regulatory playing field does not guarantee the outcome she is pointing toward. It just makes the race fairer. Bluesky still has to run it.

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