Gander Crowdfunding
Gander Social, a Canadian atproto-based social media platform currently in private beta, launched an equity crowdfunding campaign through FrontFundr at the end of October. The campaign positioning itself as an opportunity for Canadians to co-own a social media platform built on values of digital sovereignty and independence from surveillance-based business models. Within hours of launching to their Early Access Program, Gander surpassed $500k CAD in investments, and within a week reached over $1 million with more than 1200 investors. Gander is planning to use the funds for hiring engineering and trust and safety staff, developing creator monetisation tools and moderation systems, and supporting a public launch planned for 2026.
Gander sells common shares starting at $255 CAD, and aims at a target raise of $1.5M CAD, with a valuation of Gander of $15M CAD. With more than a month to go, the campaign has raised over $1.3M, and an additional 400k in investments that are likely to close.
This financial model and valuation means that Gander is already explicitly thinking about sustainable ways to generate revenue, and their pitch is feature subscriptions. The core app and functionality is free, and comes with a single account. A paid version features multiple accounts, and unspecified 'additional features'. Gander also is focused on enterprise and professional users, with features like branded accounts and team collaboration tools, as well as sponsored content.
What strikes me about Gander's crowdfunding is that it has not been a major part of the conversation on the atproto-focused dev communities on the feeds. Gander's first Bluesky post about the campaign came only after 1,500+ Canadians had already invested over $1.2M CAD. Gander's promotional material does not mention Bluesky at all, and sparsely mentions atproto, and the integration of Gander in a wider open public network is hardly mentioned.
Exgoose me? You’re funding Gander how? We're inviting Canadians to become co-owners. Over 1.5k Canadians have invested from $255 to $10K or more, totalling $1.2M so far! Become an owner! Tell friends, family, frenemies... anyone who wants better socials in Canada 🇨🇦 frontfundr.com/gandersocial
It shows that Gander has found significant traction among people who aren't yet active on atproto platforms. They've built momentum outside the existing Bluesky community, which suggests broader interest in atproto-powered social media beyond its current user base.
Gander's crowdfunding shows that digital sovereignty sells to people who might not be already active in the space of open social networking protocols, and indicates that sovereignty framing is a viable funding path for platforms targeting populations with strong regional identity, independent of whether those populations are already bought into open protocol ideals.
IETF
Bluesky has set their first official step to get (part of) atproto governed by the IETF. The Internet Engineering Task Force is the place where internet protocols become "official standards" through a formal but open process that requires multiple independent implementations and broad technical consensus, and also manages protocols like HTTP, DNS and OAuth. The first step for atproto is to host a 'Birds of a Feather meeting', to indicate interest from the community and if the IETF is a good fit for atproto.
This meeting, held last week, saw presentations from various organisations that are building on atproto, and an explanation of Bluesky which parts of atproto they want to bring to the IETF
A breakdown of what parts of ATProto the team wants to bring to the IETF #IETF124
Bluesky plans to start with the core part of atproto, and the components that become IETF standards (like the repository data structure, CBOR encoding, and firehose mechanisms), any changes would require working group approval. This means Bluesky couldn't unilaterally modify these foundational pieces without going through the IETF process. However, IETF has no enforcement power - it's a voluntary standards body. Implementers choose whether to follow the standard.
The crucial part here is that the application layer remains outside of the IETF, and app features (and the schema systems that power them, such as Lexicons), are not part of the IETF. This gives people building on atproto flexibility, which the plumbing of data synchronisation stabilised as commons infrastructure.
This first meeting was not to determine if the IETF would form a Working Group to house atproto. I'm not a professional IETF watcher (or maybe I am now?), but my sense is that the closing comments of the IETF chair person indicated that things went well, and atproto is on a good trajectory to potentially become an IETF standard in the future.
i only joined for the last 10 minutes, but took some quick quotes from the summary of the chair at the end, and im assuming things went well
"There's a there there." #ietf124 Lots of enthusiasm and positivity (and advice from experienced folks) for forming an #atproto WG at @ietf.org We had 130 people on the stream and a very active chat. Great job @bnewbold.net and @dholms.xyz and everyone else. Thank you all for showing up! 👏
We are here in the @ietf.org BOF meeting for #atprotocol Lots of friends from the community here to show support ✊
(full video of the meeting for all my protocol sickos here)
Feed convergence
Bluesky is a baseball app now:
At least 3% of all posts made on November 1 (Game 7) were about baseball. The final game also resulted in a +30% bump in traffic to Bluesky, with engagement spikes up to +66% from previous days.
Bluesky is also the Zohran Mamdani app now:
During the NYC Mayoral election night, Bluesky partnered with Graze and NYC newspapers Gothamist and WNYC to create a custom feed for the election. This feed had curated content, posts from trusted soruces, pinned posts with the latest results, and more. Graze says that the feed had over 110k unique readers, and a peak traffic of 1,200 posts per second, doubling Graze's previous monthly high.
There is a ton more news this week (the launch of Semble.so, for example), that I'll get to in another edition of ATmosphere Report in the next few days.