I have quit Digg

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It started out as an enjoyable site, where I could read flame wars about Windows Vista, and find out about crazy future tech stuff. I think I've dugg over 5000 articles during the two years I was a regular user. But now... its just unbearable.
Now it's just freepers, astroturfers and 4chan fuckwits. The misogyny, ignorance and xenophobia has become ubiquitous.

For the sake of my sanity and my blood pressure, I can no longer visit digg.com.
Can anyone point me to an online news community of decent standard?

Viceroy, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 06:26 (seventeen years ago)

Hmm, I read Ars Technica for tech news, but I try to stay away from the comments because of the predictable responses to every single issue. "SHUT UP" same with the political blogs I go to for news.

james k polk, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 06:31 (seventeen years ago)

i read ILX

Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 06:38 (seventeen years ago)

Also, Digg has always been horrible, WTF are you talking about?

Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 06:39 (seventeen years ago)

An awesome site for getting Cracked lists and three day old Nine Inch Nails news.

Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 06:39 (seventeen years ago)

metafilter is good as a news source but the commenters give me a headache sometimes. anything so "general interest" is bound to bring a few morons out of the woodwork.

i am david suzuki (get bent), Tuesday, 14 April 2009 07:33 (seventeen years ago)

Loving the Digg backlash/fiasco from their asinine Digg Bar.

Carroll Shelby Downard (Elvis Telecom), Tuesday, 14 April 2009 08:14 (seventeen years ago)

http://digg.com/d1oNOZ - 2,590 diggs, no homepage.

James Mitchell, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 09:49 (seventeen years ago)

Also, Digg has always been horrible, WTF are you talking about?
An awesome site for getting Cracked lists and three day old Nine Inch Nails news.
― Whiney G. Weingarten

Look I didn't say it was my main source of news or something, I do read newspapers and watch msnbc...
And the comments/people who make them have gotten a lot worse since this past year.

Viceroy, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 15:53 (seventeen years ago)

one year passes...

Massive Censorship Of Digg Uncovered

A group of influential conservative members of the behemoth social media site Digg.com have just been caught red-handed in a widespread campaign of censorship, having multiple accounts, upvote padding, and deliberately trying to ban progressives. An undercover investigation has exposed this effort, which has been in action for more than one year.

“The more liberal stories that were buried the better chance conservative stories have to get to the front page. I’ll continue to bury their submissions until they change their ways and become conservatives.”
-phoenixtx (aka vrayz)

Digg.com is the powerhouse of social media websites. It is ranked 50th among US websites by Alexa (117th in the world), by far the most influential social media site. It reached one million users in 2007 and likely has more than tripled that by this point. Digg generates around 25 million page views per month, over one third of the page views of the NY Times. Front page stories regularly overwhelm and temporarily shut down websites in a process called the “Digg Effect.”

The concept behind the site is simple. Submitted webpages (news, videos, or images) can be voted up (digging) or down (burying) by each user, sort of a democracy in the internet model. If an article gets enough diggs, it leaves the upcoming section and reaches the front page where most users spend their time, and can generate thousands of page views.

This model also made it very susceptible to external gaming whereby users from certain groups attempt to push their viewpoint or articles to the front page to give them traction. This was evident with the daily spamming of the upcoming Political section with white supremacist material from the British National Party (articles which rarely reached the front page). The inverse of this effect is more devastating however. Bury brigades could effectively remove stories from the upcoming sections by collectively burying them.

One bury brigade in particular is a conservative group that has become so organized and influential that they are able to bury over 90% of the articles by certain users and websites submitted within 1-3 hours, regardless of subject material. Literally thousands of stories have already been artificially removed from Digg due to this group. When a story is buried, it is removed from the upcoming section (where it is usually at for ~24 hours) and cannot reach the front page, so by doing this, this one group is removing the ability of the community as a whole to judge the merits or interest of these stories on their own (in essence: censoring content). This group is known as the Digg “Patriots”.

Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 10 August 2010 19:29 (fifteen years ago)

Read about that the other day. What a bunch of dicks, on a site full of them.

turtles all the way down (mh), Tuesday, 10 August 2010 19:49 (fifteen years ago)

gross. stuff like that makes my blood boil.

Kim, Tuesday, 10 August 2010 19:51 (fifteen years ago)

one year passes...

Goodbye and good riddance

Digg Inc., a social-media pioneer once valued at more than $160 million, is selling for the deeply discounted price of about $500,000, three people familiar with the matter said.

The buyer is New York technology development firm Betaworks, which is attempting to revive a news-sharing site that was outmaneuvered by Facebook Inc. FB -0.52% and Twitter Inc.

Digg confirmed Thursday it sold its brand, website and technology to Betaworks. The price is a pittance for a company that raised $45 million from prominent investors including Facebook investor Greylock Partners, LinkedIn Inc. LNKD +3.52% founder Reid Hoffman, and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen.

Digg received higher offers from bidders that included technology and publishing companies and start-ups but ultimately decided Betaworks had the best plan for reviving its brand, these people said. In May, Washington Post Co. hired 15 members of Digg's engineering team—more than half of the company's overall staff—for its SocialCode digital media subsidiary.

Betaworks is acquiring a website that still has a well known brand and sizable audience of more than 7 million visitors per month as of May, according to comScore.

Digg was once one of the most promising start-ups in Silicon Valley. The website was founded in 2004 as a way for consumers to put together their own collections of news and other Internet content, rather than relying on the choices made by newspaper editors.

Digg users would post links on the site's home page, then others would vote on their choices, determining the prominence of the stories they posted.

"They were one of the first social media sites," says Kristina Lerman, an assistant research professor at the University of Southern California who has studied Digg and other social-news sharing sites. "They introduced social components like having friends and followers."

The site quickly rose to prominence, in part due to telegenic founder Kevin Rose, a former cable television talk show host. In 2006, Mr. Rose landed on the cover of BusinessWeek with the now infamous cover line, "How This Kid Made $60 Million in 18 Months," referring to the company's valuation at the time.

In the fall of 2008, Digg raised nearly $29 million in venture capital from Greylock Partners, Highland Capital Partners and other financiers in an investment valuing the company at around $164 million, according to Dow Jones VentureSource.

Over the years, the company was rumored to be in negotiations to sell itself several times, including to Google Inc. GOOG -0.12% in 2008 for a reported $200 million. The deal was never completed.

For early employees with equity stakes in the company like Owen Byrne, the site's first lead engineer, the failure to sell the company was a huge disappointment. Mr. Byrne, who left the company in 2007, said in an interview he never got to "cash out and go live on the Riviera."

But the audience started to drift away in early 2010 when services such as Facebook and Twitter exploded in popularity, as users preferred getting article recommendations from their friends or people they followed.

A series of redesigns, some of which weren't well-received by users, also hurt the company. A site relaunch in the summer of 2010 triggered a backlash, with most users saying they preferred the old Digg. By the end of 2010, Digg's audience had fallen by more than half, according to ComScore.

Newer social-news website Reddit Inc. also stole some of Digg's thunder. Last December, Reddit drew more visitors than Digg for the first time, according to comScore, and since then it has maintained that lead.

In March of last year, Mr. Rose, the founder, resigned from the company. He is now a venture capitalist with Google Ventures.

Betaworks intends to fold Digg into News.me Inc., a digital media start-up that Betaworks launched in April 2011. News.me sends users links to news articles that their connections on Twitter and Facebook are reading and talking about. News.me, which uses an iPad and iPhone app and daily email newsletter, has about 10 employees.

Digg shareholders also received a very small amount of warrants in the combined Digg and News.me company worth a few percent of the new entity, said a person familiar with the matter. Digg investors are not receiving any equity in Betaworks, said the person.

The new combined company is very young and unproven and hard to value, but internally Betaworks values it around $5 million to $10 million, making the warrants worth a few hundred thousand dollars on paper.

None of Digg's remaining employees will join Betaworks as part of the acquisition. Chief Executive Matt Williams will join venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz as an entrepreneur-in-residence.

Betaworks CEO John Borthwick will become Digg's new chief.

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 13 July 2012 01:44 (thirteen years ago)

I was way into Digg around the time it launcher but it's been pretty damn shitty since, like, 2008 or something. Bleh.

alan is more upset (Stevie D(eux)), Friday, 13 July 2012 12:53 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHN-f6xTzsY

markers, Saturday, 20 July 2013 22:05 (twelve years ago)

TIL Digg was a worst animal friend

StanM, Saturday, 20 July 2013 22:53 (twelve years ago)

http://i.imgur.com/DqDS9Np.gif

polyphonic, Saturday, 20 July 2013 23:02 (twelve years ago)


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