Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Bluesky users can now post longer videos and save the inbox from chaos

Add as a preferred source on Google
Social profile page of Bluesky.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Bluesky is clearly having its feature update moment this year. Merely days after it got an Instagram-like experience with the Flashes app, the Bluesky mobile app has now received a couple of big multimedia and messaging upgrades.

As part of the v1.99 update, the social media platform now allows users to upload videos that are up to three minutes in length. So far, the duration of video posts was capped at 60 seconds.

Recommended Videos

For comparison, Instagram Reels can be up to three minutes in length, but it allowed a maximum 90-second video upload as recently as January this year.  TikTok’s mobile app allows users to record and post videos with up to 10 minutes run time.

Chat request feature in Bluesky.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Bluesky is already testing a Trending video feed as part of a beta test, so it makes sense that the platform is increasing the video upload limit. Instagram chief, Adam Mosseri, recently mentioned that creators have asked for an expanded limit because 90-seconds may not always be enough to tell a story.

Another notable feature addition is a dedicated “Chat Requests” inbox in the messaging section. Moving ahead, when users get a message from an account that’s not mutual or which they don’t follow, it will land in the chat request section.

Mute account feature in Bluesky.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Users can choose to reject or accept such message requests at their own convenience. The idea is not too dissimilar from X, which follows a similar approach to DMs from unknown accounts, a strategy that keeps spammers from throwing the message section into utter chaos.

On a similar note, muting an account is now easier. On the main feed, when users tap on the three-dot menu button corresponding to each post, they will now see a “Mute account,” feature, sitting right above the block and report controls.

Bluesky also offers similar protections for spammy content appearing in the feed, and shows warnings for impersonator accounts. As far as the latest set of features go, the v1.99 update started rolling out on March 7, as per the Google Play logs and is now widely available to Bluesky users.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Xiaomi beats Samsung to become the first non-Pixel phone with stable Android 17
The stable Android 17 rollout begins with Xiaomi's latest flagship, putting it ahead of Samsung and other rivals.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra

Android 17 rolled out to Pixel phones last month, and if you were hoping your non-Pixel Android phone would catch up anytime soon, you might have to wait. Samsung is still running the One UI 9 in Public beta, and most other manufacturers haven't even announced when their skins will get the Android 17 treatment. 

So it's a genuine surprise that Xiaomi, of all companies, just jumped the queue. Xiaomi has started rolling out HyperOS 3 updates based on stable Android 17, and it's currently limited to the Xiaomi 17 series.

Read more
Your child can now get a free Spotify account with parental controls
Kids get personalized playlists and Wrapped summaries with Spotify's new free managed accounts.
spotify-kids-free-account

Parents no longer need to pay for a premium plan to give their kids a safe Spotify account. The company announced it is expanding free managed accounts to every subscription tier, starting immediately in the US, UK, Australia, France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Combined with earlier rollouts, managed accounts are now live in 16 countries total. Spotify says more countries are coming soon.

What can kids do with a managed account?

Read more
China approves Apple Intelligence for iPhones, with Alibaba, Baidu emerging as partners
Apple Intelligence finally gets a passport to China
A promo picture of Apple Intelligence.

Apple Intelligence has finally found a way through China’s regulatory maze--and all it took was nearly two years after it brought the AI suite to iPhone users elsewhere. China’s Cyberspace Administration has registered Apple Intelligence for use on iPhones in the country, clearing the main regulatory hurdle preventing its release. The approval creates a path for Apple to deploy its generative AI tools on Chinese devices. Now, the only wait is for regulators and Apple to provide a launch date.

Alibaba and Baidu are the new AI partners

Read more