Bluesky Launches Privacy-First ‘Find Friends’ Feature Without Invite Spam

Bluesky Introduces a Safer Way to Find Friends

Bluesky has rolled out a new Find Friends feature that focuses on privacy and user control. The social network says the tool helps people discover contacts without exposing phone data or triggering unwanted messages. Unlike traditional social platforms, Bluesky matches users only when both people explicitly opt in to contact discovery.

The feature uses phone address books, but it avoids aggressive growth tactics. As a result, friend discovery feels intentional and respectful rather than automatic or intrusive.

Why Bluesky Rejected Traditional Contact Matching

For years, social apps relied on contact matching to grow quickly. However, that strategy often came with privacy risks, spam, and poor user experiences. Bluesky says it deliberately avoided those approaches while designing this feature.

In many apps, contact uploads led to automated text invites sent without consent. These messages often annoyed recipients and damaged trust. Bluesky believes fast growth should not come at the cost of user privacy or comfort.

No Automated Invites and No Contact Spam

Bluesky confirms it will never send automated invites to your contacts. Even if you upload your address book, the platform stays silent by default. Users must manually send an invite if they want to connect with someone.

This approach removes surprise messages and reduces social pressure. As a result, invites remain personal and deliberate, not promotional or system-driven.

How the Find Friends Feature Actually Works

To enable Find Friends, users must first verify their phone number. Bluesky sends a six-digit code via SMS to confirm ownership. Only after verification can contacts be uploaded for matching.

This step prevents bad actors from uploading random numbers to identify Bluesky users. Matching may take time initially, especially during the early rollout phase. You will only see matches when both users have saved each other’s numbers.

How Bluesky Protects Uploaded Contact Data

Bluesky says it stores contact information as hashed pairs, combining your number with each contact’s number. This structure makes the data difficult to reverse engineer. In addition, encryption keys remain separate from Bluesky’s main database.

Users can delete uploaded contacts at any time and opt out of the feature entirely. Bluesky also shared its technical design publicly through an RFC to invite security feedback before launch.

Availability and Regional Rollout

The Find Friends feature is now rolling out in select regions. These include the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Australia, and several European countries. Bluesky says availability will expand gradually as adoption increases.

Users who prefer not to be discoverable can simply avoid using the feature.

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