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Designers know this feeling. Your work lives inside whatever tool made it—Figma, Miro, Framer—and when that tool changes its pricing, gets acquired, or shuts down, your files go with it. We’ve now accepted this as normal.

Dan Abramov argues it shouldn’t be. In a long post about the AT Protocol (the technology behind Bluesky), he starts with how files used to work on personal computers:

The files paradigm captures a real-world intuition about tools: what we make with a tool does not belong to the tool. A manuscript doesn’t stay inside the typewriter, a photo doesn’t stay inside the camera, and a song doesn’t stay in the microphone.

He takes that intuition and applies it to social computing. What if your posts, likes, and follows were files you owned instead of data locked inside Instagram or Twitter? Abramov calls this a “social filesystem” and walks through how the AT Protocol makes it real, from records and collections to identity and links, all building toward one idea:

Our memories, our thoughts, our designs should outlive the software we used to create them. An app-agnostic storage (the filesystem) enforces this separation.

That word “designs” jumped out at me. Abramov is talking about social data, but the same logic applies to creative work. The inversion he describes, where apps react to your data rather than owning it, is the opposite of how most design tools work today:

In this paradigm, apps are reactive to files. Every app’s database mostly becomes derived data—an app-specific cached materialized view of everybody’s folders.

One of the reasons I write content here on this blog as opposed to writing in a social network or even Substack—though my newsletter is on Substack, humans aren’t perfect—is because I want the control and ownership Abramov brings up.

The whole post is worth reading. Abramov makes the AT Protocol’s architecture feel inevitable rather than complicated, and his closing line is the one I keep thinking about: “An everything app tries to do everything. An everything ecosystem lets everything get done.”

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