186 pointsby frankacter4 days ago29 comments
  • Loughla4 days ago
    Digg killed itself and let reddit eat its lunch with user hostile practices. Just like slashdot before digg.

    I find it fascinating that tech has gotten to a point where user hostile moves don't have as much of an impact anymore. Reddit pushing new Reddit layout and killing 3rd party apps is what did it for me. But it seems like nobody really cares.

    I don't know what it means, but it means something.

    • dartos4 days ago
      > that tech has gotten to a point where user hostile moves don't have as much of an impact anymore

      It’s because the small dozens of us that care about the freedom that the small internet afforded vs algorithmic content discovery is now the minority and no big platform cares about us.

      In the early days of the internet, they had to care. They had to convince people to leave their beloved forums and IRCs and move to Facebook or Reddit.

      Internet users were fairly niche and fickle. Now everyone uses the internet and most people don’t care about their own freedoms wrt how they interact with technology.

      • phs318u4 days ago
        > Now everyone uses the internet and most people don’t care about their own freedoms ...

        Honestly, you can leave it right there. No need to add " wrt how they interact with technology".

        I'd add that most people aren't even aware of their own freedoms or the value of those freedoms. Civics education is probably at its lowest point (globally). A lot of people are only aware of the heavily "interpreted" version of those specific rights that they are constantly beaten over the head about by vested interests via old and new media.

        • dartos4 days ago
          I was thinking about leaving it there, but I think if you asked someone flat out about their freedoms, they’d care.

          In practice it’s, apparently, hard to notice when they’re under attack.

          • BrenBarn3 days ago
            Well, they may say they care, but their actions are often not aligned with that.
            • dartos3 days ago
              While you’re not wrong, you have to keep in mind that there are actors who try very deliberately to hide the fact that they are removing freedoms.

              Most people aren’t on the lookout for every reduction in freedom and, at least in the US, we have surprisingly few institutional and/or powerful guards against the erosion of freedoms.

      • juujian4 days ago
        Yeah, now everyone and their mom is on the internet. And their mom probably more then they are.
        • wdr14 days ago
          time for us all to go back to gopher
        • dingnuts4 days ago
          [flagged]
          • Smithalicious4 days ago
            I knew Elon had a lot of kids but I hadn't heard of him being anyone's mom!
            • ASUfool4 days ago
              To me, he's just a mother of another sort that I cannot say in polite company.
      • jghn4 days ago
        > It’s because the small dozens of us that care about the freedom that the small internet afforded vs algorithmic content discovery is now the minority and no big platform cares about us.

        This. I see people whine all the time about being subjugated to The Algorithm on these sites. On many sites there are easy workarounds to avoid The Algorithm altogether. But when this is pointed out they come up with some reason why they hate interacting with things that way.

        In other words most people very much do want An Algorithm. They just might not want The Algorithm.

        • DrillShopper4 days ago
          Every time someone complains about ThE aLgOrItHm as a YouTube viewer(*) I remind them that the Subscriptions feed exists and continues to work.

          (*) YouTube creators, though, have to have a firm knowledge of it because at this point for many of them less than 10% of their views come through subscriptions.

          • jghn4 days ago
            Yep.

            Unless I'm using search functionality, if I don't have a mechanism to view only accounts I already predesignated *and* the ability to sort chronologically: I almost never use that site. As much as people whine about algorithmic content, people don't seem to agree with my methodologies either.

          • deathlight4 days ago
            You don't even need an account, you can use an RSS reader on channel pages. I think that's how newpipe populates its feed.
            • DrillShopper4 days ago
              Yes, but I'm talking about normies here. The kind that go "What the heck is a tee tee are ess? I just want to watch some cat videos!"

              Newer channels need to have their channel page crawled once to get the actual URL for the RSS feed but older channels do not.

        • dartos4 days ago
          “The Alogrithm” is just another idea being propagated by an algorithm anyway.
      • 4 days ago
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    • phailhaus4 days ago
      That's because Digg's changes fundamentally changed how users interact with the site and receive content. From an article at the time:

      > Protesting at the removal of the upcoming news page, the default setting of "My News", deleted favourites, the apparent front page domination of a handful of publishers, and the removal of the "bury" button (for voting down stories), Digg users flooded the front page with links to rival aggregators and pleaded with chief executive Kevin Rose to turn back the clock.

      The quality of the content itself dropped off a cliff because of systemic changes. By contrast, Reddit's redesign was a reskin. Lots of people hate it, but Reddit is fundamentally still the same.

      Source: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/pda/2010/aug/31/digg-...

      • ryandrake4 days ago
        On the other hand, I remember Fark pretty much dying after they forced an unwanted reskin on their users. The "You'll Get Over It"[1] hubris from their admin was probably the start of their downfall.

        1: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9823324

        • outer_web4 days ago
          Also the Gawker sites did the same, concurrent with their other mishaps.
      • dlcarrier3 days ago
        It doesn't matter what the content is, if it's too difficult to access I'm not going to see it.
        • phailhaus3 days ago
          Is Reddit too difficult to use for you? For me it's an endless feed of almost force-fed content. I'd actually prefer pagination to keep myself from going on for too long.
          • Tryk3 days ago
            old.reddit.com still uses pagination
      • nailer4 days ago
        Killing third party apps makes the site unusable. Some embedded videos don't have sound, you now have to click the link to the third party site to be able to hear a video.

        Meanwhile, moderation has gone insane - I've had an account banned for saying 'Hamas must be destroyed' and another banned for merely explaining JK Rowlings position on transgender matters - not even offering my own. Reddit is very, very far left of the mainstream whose advertisers it is seeking to woo.

        • phailhaus4 days ago
          Reddit doesn't control subreddit mods, and some videos not having sound does not make the site "unusable". That's why it's still so successful.
          • nailer4 days ago
            Yes, that is the problem. The mods they have are far outside the political norm, which does not match their attempts to seek mainstream advertisers, which limits the success of the site and provides an entry point for a decent competitor.

            Reddit has a large amount of video based subreddits. Videos, if you haven’t seen them before, are a mix of moving pictures and audio. When the audio doesn’t work, it does in fact make many videos unusable.

          • immibis4 days ago
            The ties between Reddit itself and the mods of any notable subreddit are stronger than you think.
        • AngryData4 days ago
          Reddit isn't suppressing you or your side specifically, they are assholes to everybody because it is moderated by tons of random people. You never got banned for posting leftist things because you don't post leftist enough things for anyone to be offended by it. Tons of people got banned for speaking a bit too frankly about their support for Luigi, which isn't a left/right issue at all, it is pure class divide.
          • nailer3 days ago
            There’s a significant difference between advocating for murder and commenting that a terrorist group must be destroyed.
            • AngryData3 days ago
              I fail to see a significant difference. Both positions are advocating for the death/destruction of individuals and groups of select people. One mans freedom fighter is another mans terrorist. And you didn't have to straight up advocate killing or death to get banned for supporting Luigi, just saying you understand his position and motives and that extremely wealthy CEOs aren't special and shouldn't be treated as such caught swaths of people in bans. You can also talk all day about how you want Russian or Chinese oligarchs to die, but an American oligarch is somehow a step too far?

              Reddit as a whole has been bought and paid for, and the majority of subs have also individually been bought and paid for. And if you don't stick to the moderate positions or a major media supported political zeitgeist you are going to run into bans.

              • nailer3 days ago
                > One mans freedom fighter is another mans terrorist.

                No. Someone that targets civilians to create political change is a terrorist.

        • 42lux3 days ago
          right click the video -> show controls -> unmute
          • nailer3 days ago
            Discussing the Reddit iOS app.
        • eek21214 days ago
          There are still 3rd party apps. One for iOS is called Hydra, which looks and works similarly to Apollo.
        • whateveracct4 days ago
          Reddit is perfectly usable in iOS Safari
        • lovich4 days ago
          The moderation is hyper partisan on all sides. Not just the left.

          I’ve had accounts banned along the the entire ecosystem of libertarians solely for the audacity of asserting that there were people who described themselves as socialist libertarians, and not declaring that there were five lights and that the philosophy did not exist.

          The admins don’t care unless it hurts advertising dollars. Reddits leadership has been very consistent on this practice ever since the early days like with u/violentacrez and the jailbait subreddit

          • castlecrasher24 days ago
            >The moderation is hyper partisan on all sides. Not just the left.

            It is absolutely just the left. The right-leaning spaces, even /r/conservative, do not ban for "wrongthink" unless it is accompanied with obvious contempt or hostility. Conversely, you'll be banned from a number of subreddits simply for posting in /r/conservative or other labeled-right-leaning subreddits.

            • hasbot4 days ago
              /r/conservative absolutely bans people that make too many anti-conservative comments.
              • nailer3 days ago
                Yes but r movies doesn’t.
            • outer_web4 days ago
              90% of /r/conservative's posts only allow flaired users (verified conservatives). There is an ongoing foodfight about verified users expressing neocon ideas like supporting Ukraine.

              I don't have any recent information on pre-emptive bans, but years ago /r/conservative had a particular mod (I won't name) who did just that.

            • DrillShopper4 days ago
              Go on to Truth Social and post "f*ck Trump" and see how long until you're banned.

              Do the same on Twitter (or call someone cisgender) and see how long until you're banned.

              (Spoiler alert - I have done both and have been banned as a result)

              • nailer4 days ago
                I think the point is we don’t want Reddit to become hyper-partisan like truth or bluesky.
                • lovich3 days ago
                  Nah, I think the point is someone wants to make a obviously false statement out loud to push the Overton window.

                  If you(the general you, not you in particular /nailer)disagree with me, then please explain how any casual observation of the subreddit r/conservative lets someone state that the subreddit does not engage in censorship or banning for wrong think, and with the critical caveat that I will not accept the moderators of r/conservatives statement’s that they don’t engage in censorship as proof on its own

            • immibis4 days ago
              This comment is incongruent with base reality. You get banned from /r/conservative for disagreeing with Donald Trump on anything and 90% of the time you can only comment if they've verified that you only commented conservatively in the past.
            • lovich4 days ago
              I literally gave you an example of being removed from right wing spaces for wrong think. They wanted me to pretend a group of people didn’t and never existed or I couldn’t participate. It’s not subtle at all either. How can you think it’s only the left?
            • Gunax4 days ago
              Well I am banned from /r/libertarian for wrong think. I didn't know about other subreddits though.
            • 3 days ago
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            • techpineapple4 days ago
              Ok, look liberals can be bad in building echo chambers, fine, but literally like 3 days ago on /r/conservative there was a post asking if it was ok to disagree with the mainstream of /r/conservative because so many conservative posts were getting removed. A casual reading of /r/conservative shows like 100s of deleted comments on every thread.

              And don’t get me wrong, I’m sure they have a huge brigading problem, again it’s not limited to /r/conservative, but /r/conservative is a laughable example. /r/Republican and /r/Trump are better examples even.

    • roger_4 days ago
      Did Slashdot really kill itself or was it just never ambitious enough to seek a broader base or try to foster communities?

      I don’t recall any user hostile practices, though I was just a passive user back in the day. I remember a few redesigns that people weren’t entirely pleased with, but nothing on the scale of the “new” Digg.

      • bombcar4 days ago
        I think Slashdot died when Cmdrtaco sold out, not for any real nefarious reason, but simply that it was no longer "a list of things Cmdrtaco was interested in" but had spread so wide that it was more of a mish-mash. Early on it was nice, because if you liked the things Cmdrtaco was interested in, you'd like almost every post (even if you got mad at it). Once it was wide, it was harder to follow.

        Digg had a similar issue, but was more "active" for awhile. Reddit really "solved" the problem by having subreddits so you could curate what you were interested in.

        Also, the people who were using /. grew up, and there wasn't really replacement people.

        • ta12434 days ago
          > Also, the people who were using /. grew up, and there wasn't really replacement people.

          This is a big thing. The internet users of the late 90s just don't exist any more. The internet isn't for nerds any more, it's as ubiquitous an infrastructure as electricity or roads, everyone uses it.

          The generation before slashdot from the 80s upto Eternal September were another group

          You can't recreate slashdot today, because the people don't exist.

          • munificent4 days ago
            > The internet users of the late 90s just don't exist any more.

            We still exist, we're just a very small slice of a much larger pie. Also, we are likely a less profitable target for advertisers so aren't an important demographic for ad-driven companies.

            • bombcar4 days ago
              I take it more to mean "people who have to be technically inclined to a degree to get online in the 90s" don't really exist as a category that is self-selecting.

              The other thing you mention is huge, too, of course. All the "famous" things from the 90s were basically labours of love by individual hackers who then looked for ways to fund it. Now everything is all about ad-revenue dollars.

            • ta12433 days ago
              If you're in the 15-25 nerdy computer demographic that waxes lyrical about the latest window mangaer, you are likely to be going into an insanely high paid job for a major corporation. The computer thing you are nerdy about is normal, you're more like a car or football nerd now - being in depth in a common subject
              • munificent3 days ago
                GenX-ers and Millenials who have been in tech a long time are likely doing OK financially, but are also likely at the age where they have kids which eat up a huge fraction of their disposable income.

                Historically, advertisers have really loved late teens and early 20-somethings. They're starting to earn money, but don't have a lot of obligations or expenses yet, so they have a lot of discretionary income.

                I also disagree that being into computers is a "common subject" these days. Everyone uses computers (some of which have keyboards), but most people aren't "into" them any more than the average commuter is into cars.

                • ta12433 days ago
                  Which is just what I said.

                  Everyone uses computers, so computer nerds are like car nerds or sport nerds.

                  In the 90s very few people used computers, and even fewer used networked computers outside of an office environment. Computers were new and unique.

                  You still get car nerds and computer nerds, but it's not the same thing when they're nerdy about a common thing.

                  • munificent3 days ago
                    Ah, I get your point now. Thanks for clarifying.
          • ksec2 days ago
            >The internet isn't for nerds any more

            That! Hit me hard. May be perhaps why the internet felt so different. Sigh.

          • codpiece2 days ago
            I sure wish we still did.
        • _DeadFred_4 days ago
          Also how many times can we talk about the Enlightenment window manager?
      • emacsen4 days ago
        My read on Slashdot was that we need to separate out the folks who built the site from those who run it.

        The original authors executed an exit strategy. They sold the site, got a bunch of money, and left to work on new things.

        The various new owners (of which there have been a few) have never been ambitious about expanding Slashdot, either in technical or social scope.

      • serviceberry4 days ago
        > Did Slashdot really kill itself or was it just never ambitious enough to seek a broader base or try to foster communities?

        It's still around, but there's one simple DAU measure we can look at: it used to be that stories would get 100-500 comments, and now they usually get 5-30.

        But I don't think it's a good example of what the parent is complaining about. Slashdot didn't change to be more hostile, it was fairly hostile from the get go. It had a snarky commenting culture, fairly brutal moderation, etc. You'd be downvoted into oblivion for the most minor transgressions - like not hating Microsoft enough.

        It just happened to be the only game in town for geek news. But then, a number of alternatives popped up - tech-related subreddits, HN, etc. I stopped using Slashdot not because of any redesign or policy change, but simply because I could get the same news elsewhere, with a lower entry bar to participate.

      • spauldo4 days ago
        I think a lot of the problem with Slashdot was cultural change. When it was new, most of the readership was made up of IT professionals and programmers. Sure, there were trolls but most of the comments were kind of like what you see on HN.

        Over time, the civility and intelligence in the comments dropped. It didn't feel like a community anymore - or at least a community the original readers wanted to be a part of, anyway. So more and more of the original readers left until the comment sections looked like 4chan.

        Slashdot had its scandals and drama, but I really believe it was the readership change that killed it.

      • hoistbypetard4 days ago
        I think it's more that second thing than the first one. I joined slashdot in the late 90s, and though some of the OSDN stuff briefly sniffed at enshittification, they didn't really ever take that plunge.

        IMO, people who liked the user generated aspect of slashdot also liked the higher velocity of digg, reddit, and even HN better as those came along. People who liked the editorial curation angle that distinguished slashdot from these newer takes came to prefer more curation and professional editorial commentary, leaving slashdot in an odd in-between space.

        • jghn4 days ago
          This is an interesting point.

          I was a heavy USENET user for several years before finding Slashdot. With /. I found myself rarely going to the source link and almost never reading the editorial commentary. I'd go straight to the comments and start reading what people had to say. All these decades later and what I love about sites like HN and Reddit is immediately wading in and embracing the zeitgeist. I *loved* Twitter for a long time for the same reason.

          But you're right. There are others I knew who were the exact opposite. And those people today have very different internet habits than I do.

          • antod4 days ago
            With slashdot I wouldn't RTFA (hadn't used that term for ages) until after reading some or most of the comments to give me an idea of whether or not it was going to be worth it.

            And often any comment I made was in relation to the ongoing discussion and not necessarily the article itself.

            I still do that here and elsewhere too.

            • mingus884 days ago
              I’m really trying to pull back from that habit because I simply can’t tell what is legit discourse anymore

              In my golden era of message boards the worst you had to deal with were trolls or bad actors but today you simply don’t know who is an LLM bot

              What’s the point in reading or replying to machines. It’s like a sand trap just wasting your time in the worst possible way

      • AnimalMuppet4 days ago
        I think Slashdot's problem was that the moderation there wasn't powerful enough. The percentage of trolls reached a certain point, and then some fraction of non-troll users got disgusted enough to leave, so the percentage of trolls was now higher, and more non-troll users got disgusted and left...

        That vicious circle destroyed the community. IMHO.

        • mixmastamyk3 days ago
          To this day, it rarely to never gives me the chance to moderate, even with excellent karma. That’s its biggest flaw imho, and a major reason why I rarely visit.
      • chairmansteve4 days ago
        They sold to Conde Nast or something.
    • SirMaster4 days ago
      I care to some extent. But both old.reddit.com still works just fine and 3rd party apps when using my personal API key still work. I am still using Apollo on iOS and it's still working just fine for me.

      As long as these 2 things work I'll likely still continue using it.

      So I care to the point that if I can get them to work then I will stick around, but when I can't then I'll leave.

      • liotier4 days ago
        old.reddit is nice but it feels like having a conversation while on death row - still a couple of appeals pending but the endgame is not really in doubt.

        The end of RedditIsFun (https://www.reddit.com/r/redditisfun/) was the end of my Reddit era - I'm still on r/askHistorians, r/askScience and a couple of niche leftovers, but I stopped moderating - the interests of the platform and its users have obviously diverged.

        • pavel_lishin4 days ago
          Not to mention, moderation tools are spread over the old site, the new site, and the mobile site in completely incongruous ways.

          I'm sure there are tools I'm not even aware of as a mod, because I'm not interested in digging into two additional interfaces, when most of what I need to do is "remove post", and "ban user from subreddit".

          • UncleSlacky4 days ago
            I moderate exclusively on Old Reddit with the Moderator Toolbox extension, I can't imagine doing it any other way.
          • SirMaster4 days ago
            I'm a mod and I mainly use the mod interface in the Apollo app that I still use.
        • 4 days ago
          undefined
      • oneeyedpigeon4 days ago
        I wouldn't say old. is fine. It's all I use, but there are big flaws: some posts just aren't viewable and you'll end up on new. if you're not careful.
        • SirMaster4 days ago
          It seems to be OK for me, but I am using https://redditenhancementsuite.com/

          So maybe that makes a difference. I think it forces the old interface. Like my URL isn't even old.reddit, but all I see is the old interface. Or maybe I don't use subs with newer posts types that are not compatible with old?

        • kevin_thibedeau4 days ago
          There are extensions to force you onto old and improve the UI.
        • hasbot4 days ago
          Seems fine to me. Been a heavy user before and after the reskin and the only thing I've noticed missing is polls.
      • Peanuts994 days ago
        Funnily my Boost for Reddit app also using a personal API key has stopped working today. Hopefully I'll be able to fix it but it'll be pretty sad if not.
      • robotguy4 days ago
        Same here, but I'm still using (glances left, glances right) Alien Blue on iOS (Shhhh...). I have NEVER seen an ad on mobile Reddit. Someday they'll do something so that it stops working and I'll be off Reddit.
      • eek21214 days ago
        Apollo was disabled by the developer. It now shows a thank you screen and stuff. There is no way you could be using it.
    • AlecSchueler4 days ago
      Reddit got big enough that the competition died off. When Digg took a nosedive there were plenty of other places with some community people could move to. Even BB forums were still a thing back then. Now pretty much everything that isn't extremely niche, and even many things that are, have been soaked up by Reddit.
      • dingnuts4 days ago
        lately Reddit has been feeling really like dead Internet though. every subreddit is talking about the same current event all the time.

        there are smaller spaces that are thriving just like the old days.

        • hylaride4 days ago
          Agreed. Over the past 2 years so many subreddits have devolved into what can be best described as doom scrolling ragebait, which is what reddit wants because it keeps eyeballs going for advertisers.

          My city's subreddit when from "here's what's cool, going on, or new" to constant political posts. I'm Canadian and it's all but been determined that political forces are using AI posting to complain and point all problems at the current government (it's not clear who is doing it, whether far-right, foreign, or the opposition itself) on all Canadian focused subreddits.

          There's also some curious stories about how a lot of the very good moderators of some of the larger ones like r/Canada, their provincial/city/regional counterparts, etc were all pushed out via various means.

          • rwmj4 days ago
            I was talking to some reddit mods on a big subreddit and apparently it was to do with the free API being turned off, and a lot of moderation tools consequently stopping working. After that the subreddit took a nosedive because they couldn't control the flood of bots and bad actors.
          • 346794 days ago
            It's important to note that reddit has embraced bots since the very beginning, with the founders using them to inflate activity. As more and more bots flood the platform, they continue to displace and drive away real humans.
          • Macha4 days ago
            My country's subreddit had a pretty big chunk of the country reading it, and it feels like the courts section of a newspaper gets posted to it every day, which I wonder how much that contributes to people's perception of the crime rate being worse than reality.
        • halyconWays4 days ago
          The major subreddits are almost entirely bots as well. Try posting anything authentic and you'll be banned, regardless of how old your account is or how human you appear to be. It's entirely controlled, fake discussion pretending to be authentic due to the legacy of the site. The concept of moderators being volunteers from the community died off a long time ago, and there are zero safeguards to ensure they aren't captured entities from some organization or NGO; in fact, the architecture of the site itself doesn't even view this threat as a threat.

          Remember, once considered a conspiracy theory, Ghlisane Maxwell was a powermod.

        • achileas3 days ago
          Maybe I've aged out of it or something but the userbase has gotten so much more annoying (and was already annoying when I finally started using it around 2010) over the last several years, that I've almost entirely quit it. I used to mod large subs, I started a company with a group of guys I met on Reddit (and we still have our own group chat), and its just completely lost all appeal to me. It's like every user is the annoying college freshman that thinks they're an expert on all things because of half a semester of intro physics.
        • thih94 days ago
          But where? What spaces?

          I know about wikia/fandom, discords (both as user hostile as reddit), or some ancient topical forums (neither small not thriving).

          • DrillShopper4 days ago
            Wikia/fandom are both as bad if not worse than reddit if you don't have an ad-blocker.
        • arkh4 days ago
          > lately Reddit has been feeling really like dead Internet though.

          Saccharined killed. You used to be able to make some really vitriolic comments on most subs just for the lulz and only get downvoted to hell and back. But nowadays if you're not following the doxa you get perma-banned from some sub first then next day perma-banned from reddit itself. And if you comment on one of the main subs you go directly to reddit permaban.

          • Workaccount24 days ago
            I quoted Islamic religious leaders views on homosexuality during the height of "Free Palastine" and got a 3 day site wide ban for spreading hate and a permaban from r/worldnews.

            The API change went into effect soon after and that was it for me. It was time to go anyway. Had been on the site for 12 years, never a ban or anything, but in the last year received 5-6 other sub level bans.

            • AlecSchueler4 days ago
              Was there a reason to share those quotes in that context other than to spread FUD about Islam and weaken support for Palestine?
              • Workaccount24 days ago
                Yes, people seem to have misunderstandings about the uncompromising conservative views that underpin the Palestinian state.

                Should Israel carpet bomb Palestine and everyone in it? No.

                Should the world still tolerate states built on a foundation of homophobia, misogyny, and brain washing? Also no.

                If it was up to me I'd disperse the entire population of Israel/Palestine, and then sink the whole land mass into the Mediterranean. Religious zealots fucking everything up for everyone because they genuinely think that their Santa Clause is real.

              • 4 days ago
                undefined
          • Macha4 days ago
            Honestly the amount of vitriolic comments has increased, and that seems to be more part of the problem than what you've presented here.

            Sure, most of them are still downvoted to shit, and it's not clear how many are trolls vs true believers, but I do think it encourages the true believers that their views are more widespread.

        • foolfoolz4 days ago
          reddit is a really weird website these days. the main subs push misinformation / ai generated garbage. the same posts are on every sub. the self post subs are almost 100% ai written. the comments which historically have been sometimes useful just feel hollow
        • kacesensitive4 days ago
          I miss 2021-22 reddit. Seemed we finally went back to normal.
          • superkuh4 days ago
            Shifting baselines in action. 2021-22 reddit was/is terrible. It had already accepted the massive injections of venture capital and turned into facebook for all the refugees in the second half of the 2010s. Things like corporations (and for-profit human persons) posting to their own account pages instead of subreddits, the terrible redesigns, constant top-down moderation instead of letting subreddits be like forums, etc, etc.

            Reddit normal is 2008-2013. This kind of normal still exists on usenet, if you seek it.

            • giraffe_lady4 days ago
              I remember that period as the one where non-nude sexual images of children was a huge problem on reddit, but it wasn't specifically against the rules. The admins were doing things like working closely with, even giving out a mod of the year award to, violenacrez, the guy who created and maintained r/jailbait and r/creepshots¹ as well as dozens of similar subs. The material itself was bad enough but it was extremely obvious to everyone that these subs were being used for people to meet and DM each other CSAM.

              And then of course that period basically ended with gamergate, for whom reddit was one of the central venues to choose targets and organize harassment campaigns from. Also not against the rules at the time, since the harassment happened elsewhere and was only coordinated on reddit.

              Reddit has always sucked.

              ¹ Both explicitly intended for sharing sexual & sexualized photos of minors

            • halyconWays4 days ago
              Normal reddit died when Carmen Ortiz drove Aaron Swartz to suicide over persecuting him like a terrorist for downloading a few thousand public domain scholarly articles. (Which Meta and others now do with proprietary, copyrighted material at a volume 1 million times more.)
    • stronglikedan4 days ago
      At least reddit still maintains old.reddit. Digg never gave users the choice. If there is ever only new reddit, then there won't be reddit for me.
      • paradox4604 days ago
        Sort of. Reddit killed the old mobile site, which I built to run over 3G on a 533MHz CPU with 512Mb of RAM

        The new mobile website is at least an order of magnitude heavier than the old one

        There are some old screenshots of it, I've got one of them in my blog here: https://pdx.su/blog/2023-04-06-rip-reddit-compact/

        • vekatimest4 days ago
          I loved i.reddit, and really miss sites that were actually optimized for performance and low-end devices. It being removed kind of felt like a final nail in the coffin for that whole era. I think HTML Gmail was killed around that time too.
      • aaronbaugher4 days ago
        I had to find a browser plugin that automatically converts reddit links to old.reddit, for times when I'm researching something at work and land on a reddit link. The new system seems aggressively designed to keep you from reading the content.
      • adzm4 days ago
        Same, I've tried to get used to the 'new' format multiple times, but it's incredibly frustrating
      • ethagnawl4 days ago
        Please don't remind them that it still works.
        • oneeyedpigeon4 days ago
          I know you're joking, but I'd love to know their take on it. I assume they're viewing the logs and cursing all of us forcing them to keep maintaining old.
          • jghn4 days ago
            I always assumed that the new reddit UI was more for app based usage than browser. And there is/was a hope to steer more people towards using the app.

            I also assume they are smart enough to realize that some people will simply never use the app. In which case they're not realizing as much benefit from forcing the new UI on them. Sure, there's a cost to maintain the old one. But as long as things aren't breaking it's easier to keep it.

            • ryandrake4 days ago
              I've always assumed there's some PM sitting there at Reddit, watching the usage metrics every month, and as soon as it dips below his threshold, he'll order it shut down. "Should we tell 1 out of 1000 users to fuck off, or 1 out of 100 users?"
              • ikr6783 days ago
                I think they have stats showing that the most prolific contributors all use the old reddit interface and so they don't yet want to risk their more engaging content.
    • bena4 days ago
      Slashdot was always more IT focused. Digg and reddit were more general appeal.

      And as a larger portion of the online audience became "non-IT-related" people, Slashdot mattered less and less.

      Although, I've always liked Slashdot's moderation system. Users who have been well moderated in the past were randomly selected to moderate pages. And scores were capped so you didn't have snowball effects where if something started getting negative traction, it would get buried.

      It was harder to game because populism didn't work and there were no moderators to complain to. I never had to worry if marking something a "Troll" would cause me to get bombed with messages. The user would never know who did it.

    • jghn4 days ago
      > But it seems like nobody really cares.

      Speaking for myself it's because old.reddit is still available. I loathe the new reddit after all this time. If they nuke old reddit my usage would go down quite a bit.

    • Workaccount24 days ago
      >But it seems like nobody really cares.

      Reddit is referred to by most of it's users as an app.

      That should tell you everything you need to know.

    • ElCapitanMarkla4 days ago
      > But it seems like nobody really cares.

      I think enough people cared. I end up back on reddit from time to time but it's nothing like it was before the big 3rd party app debacle.

    • ubermonkey4 days ago
      I was part of the Digg-to-Reddit migration 15 years ago or whatever, and now i don't even remember what Digg did to piss us all off.
      • phailhaus4 days ago
        They got rid of downvoting, which caused everyone's feed to devolve into garbage really fast.
    • looseyesterday4 days ago
      I think reddit is the best among a very large selection of poor choices. Where else could you go?
      • baggachipz4 days ago
        Lemmy has been growing quite well and has a passionate userbase. It's still microscopic compared to Reddit, but it has great apps and scratches the itch for me.
        • bluGill4 days ago
          So long as you stay away from anything politics (including news!). They are extremely left wing - the developers believe the Chinese communist party can do no wrong. There are instances that are not quite that bad, but they are still very left wing and make central or right wing positions unwelcome.

          There are some good tech communities there.

          • baggachipz4 days ago
            The developers of the platform are tankies, but instances other than lemmy.ml and Hexbear are more normal. Left-leaning, yes, but I also unsub from politics communities and have a block list of a few words (you can probably assume what those are) to prevent those things from getting through.
          • Steltek4 days ago
            The politics are so bad that I think people should stay away from Lemmy period. It's like saying it's fine to create a Xitter account these days as long as you stay away from politics.
          • pumnikol4 days ago
            I hardly noticed, and I've been on Lemmy for nearly two years. I think it depends on which instance you sign on to. But a) you can filter out certain topics, users and even entire instances from your feed, and b) you can always sign up to a different instance if you still feel annoyed for whatever reason. For example, I left lemmy.world when it turned into some sort of Reddit clone.
      • dartos4 days ago
        Private discord servers for everything nowadays.

        The open searchable internet is dead for people trying to find community, imo.

      • whywhywhywhy4 days ago
        People already left and they're in Discord. Reddit today is a shell of what it was.
        • wholinator24 days ago
          You don't have to link anything but what kind of discord servers? Also the problem with discord for me is the fact that information only exists momentarily. Reddit search is bad but at least you can Google. Discord servers are basically impenetrable if you can't check it constantly
          • mingus884 days ago
            Yeah I just can’t grok discord as a replacement for message boards

            It’s a chat system. It’s a very nice IRC but how are you supposed to get up to speed? I’m also feeling super out of touch with folk who use telegram as social media.

            No way I’m staying connected all the time to be a regular. Too many chats and the quality of the content is not very high to be engaging

          • whywhywhywhy3 days ago
            Yeah I'm not saying its a good replacement, it's actually atrocious but its already replaced reddit and is where the actual users are now.

            Reddit doesn't know it yet but they're already very deep in the twilight phase of their site and it's going to start accelerating.

    • donatj4 days ago
      What did it do that was particularly "user hostile"?

      My memory of the event was that they just launched a redesign that was half baked and everyone bailed overnight.

      I've always thought that was why old.reddit.com still exists, paranoia about the same thing happening

      • Jordan-1174 days ago
        They fundamentally broke how the site worked:

        - they removed downvoting ("burying")

        - they took down the various "Upcoming" pages that allowed users to vet and weigh in on rising stories before they hit the front page

        - they replaced the unified home page with algorithmic recommendations (and the algo was garbo)

        - they introduced automated publisher accounts that circulated posts from official sources, crowding out organic submissions

        - they deleted users' previously saved posts

        - they largely deleted all posts, comments, vote counts older than a few months

        - they broke the RSS feeds and third-party tools

        All the above pissed off power users, and the rest were repelled by the nosedive in quality, the constant bugginess, and some terrible design choices (tiny light-blue-on-white text boxes, all usernames converted to lower case, impossible to view all comments, etc.)

      • Rebelgecko3 days ago
        People felt the same way about i.reddit.com until it got turned off.
    • suspended_state4 days ago
      Reddit has a much broader aim than Slashdot ever did. Slashdot _is_ just about discussing news, just like HN. Reddit is basically a BBS with no particular topic or usage in mind. They cannot be compared.
    • righthand4 days ago
      Yes it is for me too. I even went so far to downrank reddit links in Kagi. Most of the time Reddit links require using old theme or turning off my vpn. So it’s not worth ranking them higher.
      • paradox4604 days ago
        Fwiw you can make kagi rewrite all reddit links to old
        • righthand4 days ago
          I just want to support decentralized social media. I can’t handle the constant national hysteria the stems from centralization. I don’t use reddit other than reading comments on a movie I saw or recipes for eggplant. Now that I’ve down ranked it I have found there are other sites and communities to read instead with the same information. For example lemmy is active enough for movies and there are popular cooking blogs with comments.
    • dehrmann4 days ago
      The rise of TikTok makes me think people might not consciously care, but they'll vote with their eyeballs if someone comes along with a better experience.
    • lelanthran3 days ago
      > Reddit pushing new Reddit layout and killing 3rd party apps is what did it for me. But it seems like nobody really cares.

      People do care; just look at the non-trivial number of users on Mastodon, Discord, Bluesky, etc.

      People did jump from reddit, they just don't realise that they're jumping from the frying pan into the fire...

    • QuantumGood4 days ago
      It had a huge impact on Reddit, but it's akin to an oil tanker: Dropping a huge anchor doesn't slow it down much visibly.
    • newsclues4 days ago
      Only a small fraction of users are content creators (at least successfully).

      We may have reached the point where there is a critical mass of paid professional content creators rather than amateur creators who will be more likely to leave for new platforms. The professionals stick around on platforms because they have fans/viewers who are profitable.

      • mingus884 days ago
        I miss the internet when folk posted about what they were passionate about and that was it
        • newsclues2 days ago
          Yes, but I also miss when the people on the internet were smarter than average.
    • joelthelion4 days ago
      As long as enough people care enough to move to something else, we're good.

      Right now, it looks like lemmy might have just enough momentum, but I'm not sure yet.

    • JeremyNT4 days ago
      > Reddit pushing new Reddit layout and killing 3rd party apps is what did it for me. But it seems like nobody really cares.

      It's not that users don't care, it's that the money dried up.

      It used to be that when a site suffered enshittification, a new batch of VCs would show up to fund some clean and functional competitor. Then after the IPO or sale, the former "upstart" quickly becomes the incumbent and shitifies itself.

      Nobody's investing in a de-shittified reddit or most social media companies.

      The only exception seems to be bsky, right now a VC funded deshittified twitter with massive growth. But they got a huge boost from Jack Dorsey early on - I doubt they would've gotten off the ground without the tech and financial resources he brought in day one. This Digg play seems to sort of be in that same vein, despite the old brand.

    • emacsen4 days ago
      This is interesting, what do you mean by hostile user practices? Can you say more (about both /. and Digg)?
    • BeetleB4 days ago
      I think Slashdot's major changes came after Digg had "died".
    • karaterobot4 days ago
      People don't care, that's true. Most people just want to see funny memes and videos, they don't think too hard about it. Not saying that's good, in fact I'd say the opposite.

      Here we are on HN, which is not, itself, user hostile. And there's Metafilter, which is still hanging in there, a bastion of the old internet.

      But I get the sense that many have retreated off the open internet, into private communities. I've been running one for 7 years or so. Safer there, and you can actually have conversations with people. In a way, this is the digital equivalent of how the real world works: the thing which isn't natural is trying to talk to people across a massive crowd, while other people shout advertisements at you, and still others record everything you say.

      These bigger link aggregators like Reddit have become a way to see new links, grab them in a net, and run back to the private community to discuss them.

    • mtzaldo4 days ago
      It could mean people are being payed to post content to keep momentum.
      • criddell4 days ago
        Kevin Rose has talked about how important some of the power users (like Mr Babyman) was to Digg. He didn't say so explicitly (not that I recall), but I got the impression that there was definitely some kind of relationship between Digg and some users.
    • nehal3m4 days ago
      Those are the effects of enshittification. Users and advertisers are stuck.

      Quoting Cory Doctorow: "I call this enshittification, and it is a seemingly inevitable consequence arising from the combination of the ease of changing how a platform allocates value, combined with the nature of a "two-sided market", where a platform sits between buyers and sellers, hold each hostage to the other, raking off an ever-larger share of the value that passes between them."

      • nailer4 days ago
        This seems fitting, Doctorow was also on https://boingboing.net/ which started as a place for whimsical or intellectually curious content but now every third article is obsessed with US politics.
        • 4 days ago
          undefined
    • ta12434 days ago
      > Just like slashdot before digg.

      Fuck Beta

    • codexb4 days ago
      [dead]
  • angry_moose4 days ago
    Oh damnit. I actually like current Digg. Doesn't nearly have the reach it used to, but its definitely in my "scan once a day list" for a couple interesting articles.

    > Digg founder Kevin Rose has teamed up with former rival Alexis Ohanian to buy the once-popular content aggregator as they bet on an artificial intelligence-powered revival of the platform that once drew around 40 million monthly visitors.

    Sounds way worse.

    Edit: And, "Current Digg" is apparently down now.

    • rideontime4 days ago
      Like a lot of guys who haven't had a hit since the dotcom boom, he seems to have spent the past decade jumping on whatever bandwagon. He went big into crypto, too. https://www.coingecko.com/en/nft/moonbirds
      • dehrmann4 days ago
        Another pattern I've seen is people recycling their old ideas, but with a twist that's the latest trend.
      • qingcharles4 days ago
        The floor price for these things isn't awful ($1000) as NFT PFPs go, so they've retained some sort of value, perhaps because of Rose.
  • peter4224 days ago
    It is very funny that the article highlights these two guys saving Digg, and they both care so deeply about it that they are going to... sit on the board and keep their day jobs.

    They won't go all-in on the idea and expect that we'll all be super excited by it. Just shows how out of touch VCs can get.

    • righthand4 days ago
      Kevin Rose especially out of touch, but mostly because he spends his time hyping his own ideas and if they don’t work he steps out until the next idea comes around.
  • bityard4 days ago
    Back in the day, my top three websites I would visit were: 1) Slashdot 2) Digg 3) Reddit

    At the time, Reddit was extremely small and looked a lot like Hacker News does now, except that the content was about 1/3 nerd-related, 1/3 mainstream news, and 1/3 was people's experiences and questions about recreational drugs. (Which I was not and am not into.) I'm not sure if there were even subreddits at that point.

    • DrillShopper4 days ago
      At the very beginning there weren't subreddits. When they introduced subreddits they put all previous posts under /r/reddit.com.
  • danso4 days ago
    Dang I thought this was going to be a throwback (2013) article about Digg's post-v4 relaunch [0] by Betaworks.

    > The new Digg has little in common with the old site: it has big photos instead of tiny text, does not allow for comments, and most importantly, it depends on human editors in addition to an algorithm that weighs user voting. So far, people seem to like it. A new survey, this time with 2,600 users, showed that 81 percent would recommend the new Digg to a friend.

    One thing I remember about this phase was how good the headlines were, they must have paid a decent sum for human editors.

    [0] https://www.theverge.com/2013/2/4/3950596/diggs-traffic-rebo...

    • almosthere4 days ago
      I "liked" the new digg after it was purchased because someone took up the mantle, but I expected it to grow into the features it was missing, even perhaps have a new diggnation podcast behind it. But it basically just sat still, hoping to just ride the domain name. It also went extreme woke since I believe the human editors were hired that way.
  • TomMasz4 days ago
    The Digg of (literally) yesterday was not the Digg that shot itself in the foot. It was just a site that posted links to various things you could find in other places. Not sure what they're planning but I can't help feeling the ol' ship has sailed on Digg as any kind of community site.
    • probably_wrong4 days ago
      Just for posterity sake I'd like to point out that the Digg of yesterday also shot themselves in the foot when they chose (allegedly) to copy all of their content from DamnInteresting [1].

      Once they got themselves called out they stopped sharing that content and, consequently, the quality of the site went back down. Until yesterday they lived off Reddit polls, advice columns, and Twitter controversies.

      Source: I check the website about once a week.

      [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39046023

      • TomMasz4 days ago
        I noticed the content change, but missed the reason behind it.
  • Stevvo4 days ago
    I missed Diggnation, it was the first podcast I listed to. Happy to find it has already been revived; https://www.diggnation.show/
    • doix4 days ago
      Yeah, it was my first podcast too. I'm pretty sure it's part of the reason I went into tech, had a pretty big influence on my life. Kevin mentioned trying to buy back digg on the podcast, I couldn't tell if it was a serious comment or not. Looks like it was.
  • flkiwi4 days ago
    Given Kevin Rose's web3 turn, I don't have high hopes.
    • criddell4 days ago
      I think he's pretty much done with cryptocurrency stuff and has moved on to health and AI (separately).
      • flkiwi4 days ago
        I was less focused on his NFT/crypto phase as on his faddishness. He just sort of grabs after whatever is in the headlines.
        • paradox4604 days ago
          I mean, he always has. Let's not forget that diggs grew the way it did because he talked about it on TechTV (rip)
          • flkiwi4 days ago
            I found myself watching an episode of diggnation a couple of months ago. It wasn't as funny as I remember, but, man, those were simpler times.
    • nailer4 days ago
      If I make a post that gets 100K likes, please give me some of the ad revenue.
    • jdlyga4 days ago
      the web3 bros moved on to ai agents
      • nailer4 days ago
        That's just the scammers. The people building financial products never left.
  • RobotToaster4 days ago
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0

    Anyone else remember?

  • jaredcwhite4 days ago
    Cue "It's a Trap!" meme.

    The future of online content sharing and discussion is decentralized, open source, and based on free protocols. We absolutely don't need another Reddit riding off of past Digg vibes. We need a fast ejection out of corporate silos and proprietary platforms!

  • picafrost4 days ago
    As one platform chases profits and loses its soul, another resurrects to welcome the nostalgic refugees. The eternal cycle of digital migration continues.
    • permo-w4 days ago
      does it though? do you really expect this to be a success? people will just stay on reddit like they always do. twitter has been taken over by one of the most hated people in the world and they appear to be doing better than ever user-wise
      • basisword4 days ago
        I think current Reddit is very different from what Digg was. Reddit is too much user generated content (i.e. the exact same AskReddit questions asked on a weekly basis) and not enough cool links/videos anymore. At least on the non-logged in homepage. If Digg is exclusively links, it'll definitely have a place imo.
        • permo-w3 days ago
          obviously it massively depends on what subs you follow, but yes this is the problem with reddit. it's completely antithetical to long-form content that builds over time.
  • indigodaddy4 days ago
    Ahh the nostalgia: https://youtu.be/W1_YoG7lqI4
  • superultra4 days ago
    I'm a user of the original Digg (and many of its iterations, including plastic.com).

    This whole approach seems tone deaf:

    > A.I. will also play a larger part in making Digg more accessible to users, Mr. Rose said. For instance, he said, a community of science-fiction enthusiasts could have their discussions translated into Klingon, the language used by the “Star Trek” alien race of the same name. A.I. tools can also help reduce spam, misinformation and harassment, he said."

    Like nearly everything these days, this sounds like they raised money based almost solely on the premise that "AI will fix everything." They don't seem to understand that humans doing things is what makes all of this interesting to humans. I remember a BBS door that translated english to klingon. It was cool then because someone built it, but the fun was always doing it ourselves.

    And is there any precedent for AI moderation at scale? It's another example of a LLM wrapper with no moat.

    Finally, the attention to moderators seems like a swing at Reddit. But are there people dumb enough to fall for that trick again (don't answer that lol)?

    At some point we need to realize that these VC driven "ideas" are all just content honeypots for AI training and do our own thing.

    • basisword4 days ago
      They kind of took that quote out of context. In another article he begins the quote with something like "I'm completely making this up but imagine...". It wasn't completely serious. His real example was more around using AI to help moderators so they are focussed less on grunt work and more on community. Sounds sensible. In reality though I think he just thought it would be fun to give Digg another shot - and why not?
  • DustinBrett4 days ago
    We need it, Reddit has become terrible.
    • IshKebab4 days ago
      Yeah but old Digg wasn't as good as Reddit in its heyday.

      It definitely feels like the internet peaked like 5-10 years ago. Reddit was good, Stackoverflow was tolerable, I didn't use Twitter but I guess that was better too.

      • y-c-o-m-b4 days ago
        By my rough estimate/experience, late 2018 is when enshittification began to really seep into everything both online and offline. Covid was the final nail in the coffin.
    • mike_hock4 days ago
      A Reddit exodus to Digg would truly be ironic.
    • pseudospock4 days ago
      Just use Lemmy.
      • samtheDamned2 days ago
        Lemmy has grown quite a lot and it has been easy to replace reddit with for things like tech focused news and discussion. Unfortunately smaller community focused subreddits still don't have a great alternative but with lemmy slowly growing who knows maybe new communities can pop up.
  • ChrisArchitect4 days ago
    It's funny because Reddit basically owes Digg everything.

    The history is often overlooked: when digg fumbled/shot itself in the foot, Reddit was in the right-place-at-the-right-time and got lucky by the mass exodus looking for somewhere to go. Reddit itself was failing fast and on its last legs at the time held afloat by its core users and that's it. They didn't know what they were going to do and rather than being visionaries in any way really they got lucky hosting everyone with a slew of very standard web 2.0 features. It is/was nothing special. It has been riding the wave ever since (and also why I see no reason to give people like Alexis Ohanian any praise or credibility when he's out there talking about all kinds of nonsense, but I digress). And as with any social site, it's the userbase/community that pulls it thru darkness to the where it is now.

    • paradox4604 days ago
      For what it's worth, reddit is only 6 months younger than diggs, and both were developed in tandem.

      Prior to the Diggv4 debacle, there was already a sense that reddit was "better" than digg in important areas. Digg had problems with power users, and reddit was able to pitch itself as being immune to them (lol). Comment sections on reddit in this period tended to have better content than digg, and subreddits were a meaningful way to curate your content, something digg lacked.

      A common feeling of the era was that digg looked better, but reddit had better content. Less, but better

    • sylens4 days ago
      Digg v4 was a huge deal in how badly it was designed and rolled out
      • josefresco4 days ago
        V4 was the final death blow. But the Google Panda algorithm update (and vote manipulation) set the stage.
  • ojbyrne4 days ago
    Just to be clear, digg started uncapitalized. I still miss the small d. It was more humble.
  • returnInfinity4 days ago
    Reddit is worth 27 billion right now. What could have been.
    • DeathArrow4 days ago
      It might get acquired by Elon. :)
      • forgetfreeman4 days ago
        *quietly checks the status of phpBB
        • Cthulhu_4 days ago
          I've moved our forums to Xenforo a few years ago, by the creators of vBulletin. It's alright if you liked vB but it doesn't seem to get much updates, but that might be because it's "finished" software.

          I also tried some years ago to install Discourse but you need all kinds of server setup for that, too complicated to be an alternative to "old fashioned" PHP forum software. And that's before going into the UX, which is more webapp than old fashioned forums. I'm glad I didn't push through with that migration.

          • pavel_lishin4 days ago
            > it doesn't seem to get much updates, but that might be because it's "finished" software.

            Thank the gods.

        • almosthere4 days ago
          https://github.com/NodeBB/NodeBB might be worth checking out
          • 3 days ago
            undefined
        • nedrylandJP4 days ago
          A decent number of redditors moved to Lemmy instances after reddit pulled that move with the API/unofficial apps a few summers ago
          • Macha4 days ago
            It felt like the Lemmy instances really died off in a month or two.
            • baggachipz4 days ago
              Some did, others are thriving. Still a small community though.
    • wewewedxfgdf4 days ago
      The founders sold Reddit for how much was it $10M or $20M?
      • Macha4 days ago
        To be fair, that was followed by like 5-6 years being a thing that Conde Nast had probably forgotten they owned and going between making a loss and barely breaking even with a skeleton crew.

        Now it's got a very large team, all the investor pandering and user hostile activity, and instead it's making a large loss, which of course for investors means it's more valuable.

        • conradfr4 days ago
          I still don't understand how one of the most popular website with free content and moderation and extremely cacheable content was never profitable.

          Unrelated but they removed the <subreddit>.reddit.com shortcut some months ago.

          • dehrmann4 days ago
            Most people aren't willing to pay for content, and it's harder to target ads, or you're not showing ads at the right time.
        • dehrmann4 days ago
          Condé practically forgetting about reddit was one of the best things that happened to it. There was pressure to scale the side up, but they didn't have time to chase engagement metrics to the detriment of the experience. It's probably the only $10B+ tech company I can think of that ran so lean for so long.
      • throwaway9843934 days ago
        [dead]
  • dusted4 days ago
    Anyone remember fazed.org (slogan: until the weekend heals us) ? Absolutely loved that site, in a way, it was similar to hn in design and "random interesting stuff" type of content.. For me, what killed it was the now long dead "stumple upon" (well, maybe not dead, but they did something years ago to make it suck more)
  • HumblyTossed4 days ago
    They'll never get back what it once was. Things are different now. Rose is ... different also.
  • Brajeshwar4 days ago
    I was there Gandalf, I was there 3,000 years ago.

    Gotta Digg. “Did you hear that awful sound. Oh! Another Server’s Down.”

  • xhkkffbf4 days ago
    Metacomment: There are 100 comments here. Only 2 on the NY Times. That's a huge difference.

    Of course only paid subscribers can comment. Maybe that's the root of difference.

  • lmm4 days ago
    So are they going to avoid the negative changes that Reddit made? Since they're saying the new Digg is going to be explicitly aimed at mobile users, sounds like no?
    • rchaud2 days ago
      Mobile users = app based = no ad blocking and maximum tracking.

      New Digg does not want the old Digg audience that pirates MP3s, torrents TV shows and hates advertising.

  • roger_4 days ago
    I really hope they:

    1) have a solution for spam (both blatant and subtle)

    2) actively support their moderators

    3) have well thought out and consistently enforced policies.

    Reddit lost all of my goodwill years ago because of this.

    • JTyQZSnP3cQGa8B4 days ago
      They'll have none. Digg was taken over by power-users IIRC and that's why everyone left. As for the spam and policies, I don't expect any change.
    • dartos4 days ago
      The issue is that none of that drives engagement.
  • scottrogers864 days ago
    Had a feeling something was brewing here with the relaunch of Diggnation. Welcome back!
  • 4 days ago
    undefined
  • drooopy4 days ago
    I just realized that Diggnation is also back.
  • whoomp123424 days ago
    its a trap!!!!!!
  • thomassmith654 days ago
    They need AI to ensure only MrBabyMan's posts reach the front page. Human curation wasn't 100% effective.