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]} |- class="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;" ! Commercial? | Yes |- class="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;" ! Ownership | |- style="vertical-align: top;" ! Type of site | Community |- class="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;" ! Registration | Free |- style="vertical-align: top;" ! Owner | digg |- style="vertical-align: top;" ! Created by | Kevin Rose |- class="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;" ! Launched | |- class="hiddenStructure" style="vertical-align: top;" ! Current status of site | |} Digg is a website with an emphasis on technology and science news. It combines social bookmarking, blogging, and syndication with a form of non-hierarchical, democratic editorial control. News stories and websites are submitted by users, and then promoted to the front page through a user-based ranking system. This differs from the hierarchical editorial system that many other news sites employ.

Functionality

Readers can view all of the stories that have been submitted by fellow users in the "digg all" section of the site. Once a story has received enough "diggs", depending on the calculations performed by Digg's algorithm, it appears on Digg's front page. Should the story not receive enough diggs, or if enough users make use of the problem report feature to point out issues with the submission, the story will remain in the "digg all" area, where it may eventually be removed.

Articles are short summaries of stories on other websites with links to the stories, and provisions for readers to comment on the story. All content and access to the site is free, but registration is compulsory for certain elements, such as promoting ("digging") stories, submitting stories and commenting on stories. Digg also allows for stories to be posted to a user's blog automatically when he or she diggs a story. As of July 2006, there are over 400,000 registered Digg users. This represents substantial growth from one year earlier, when in July of 2005 membership had just reached 17,000.

Originally, stories could be submitted in sixteen different categories which include: deals, gaming, links, mods, music, robots, security, technology, Apple, design, hardware, Linux/Unix, movies, programming, science and software. A separate category titled Digg News was reserved for special announcements relating to the site, and could only be used by Digg administrators.

With the release of Digg 3.0 on June 26, 2006, the categories became divided into 6 containers: Technology, Science, World & Business, Videos, Entertainment, Gaming, with sub-categories. For instance, the "Technology" container includes the following categories: Apple, Design, Gadgets, Hardware, Tech Industry News, Linux/Unix, Mods, Programming, Security, Software and Tech Deals.

Site features

Problem reporting

To help remove duplicate, spam or offensive story submissions, Digg.com allows users to report such posts. When a story has been reported enough times, it is automatically removed from the queue and/or buried by the Digg software.

Story reporting options include duplicate story, spam, wrong topic, inaccurate, and ok, this is lame.

Comment rating

On March 4, 2006, Digg switched to a threaded comment system. The new system allows users to reply to another users comment, without having to quote someone by copying and pasting, though only two levels deep.

Digg users are able to rate other users' comments, which ensures that spam and/or offensive comments stay virtually invisible. User comments are under a 'digg' system much like the stories on the rest of the site. User comments can be 'dugg,' making them more visible, or 'buried' making a comment hidden until the user clicks a "show comment" link.

History

Digg started out as an experiment in November 2004 by Kevin Rose, [Owen Byrne], [Ron Gorodetzky], and Jay Adelson (who serves as CEO), all of whom currently play an active role in the management of the site.

"We started working on developing the site back in October 2004," Kevin Rose told Richard MacManus of ZDNet "We started toying around with the idea a couple of months prior to that, but it was early October when we actually started creating what would become the beta version of digg. The site launched to the world on December 5th 2004."

Although the domain name of Digg is registered under the name Jerimiah Udy, he is not one of the original founders of Digg, but rather a friend of Kevin Rose's. The domain name was registered under Jerimiah's name because Rose did not want others to know that he was associated with Digg. He wanted Digg to stand on its own and not become a message board for all things he personally stood for.

Kevin Rose's friend David Prager (The Screen Savers, This Week in Tech) originally wanted to call the site “Diggnation”, but Kevin wanted a simpler name. He chose the name "Digg", because users are able to "dig" stories, out of those submitted, up to the front page. The site was called “Digg” instead of “Dig” because the domain name “dig.com” was previously registered by the Walt Disney Company.

“Diggnation” would eventually be used as the title of Kevin Rose and Alex Albrecht's weekly podcast.

The original design was free of advertisements, and was designed by Dan Rice. But as Digg became more popular, Google AdSense was added to generate revenue. The site was updated in July 2005, to "Version 2.0". The new Digg featured a friends list, the ability to "digg" a story without being redirected to a "success" page, and a new interface designed by Daniel Burka, of the web design company [silverorange]. After the redesign, some users complained about the lack of the simplistic, minimalist layout used in the original version of Digg. The site developers have stated that in future versions a more minimalist design will likely be employed. On Monday June 26, 2006 V3 of Digg was released with specific categories for Technology, Science, World & Business, Videos, Entertainment and Gaming as well as a View All section where all categories are merged.

Digg has grown large enough that submissions sometimes create a sudden swarm of traffic to the "dugg" website. This is referred to by some Digg users as "the Digg effect" and by some others as the site being "dugg to death". However, in many cases stories are linked on many of the popular bookmarking sites at the same time. For example, a story may be linked simultaneously at Fark.com, Boingboing.net, and Slashdot.org. In such cases, the impact of the "digg effect" is difficult to assess.

Timeline

[link]. Google searches for "digg," "slashdot," and "fark" appear to roughly coincide with Alexa's rankings [link].

Online vigilantism

Digg is often used to spur other internet users into vigilantism, which has resulted in action both on and offline. In several cases members have, presumably in acts of vigilante justice, flooded internet websites and businesses with DDoS attacks in response to stories posted by single users. Examples of this include:

Criticism

Many have expressed concern over Digg's growing influence as a news source. The site's reliance on users to submit stories and moderate their prominence has been criticized for spotlighting false, misleading and poorly-written information. [link] Some issues have been significantly publicized:

See also

References

  [Tale of a Lost Cellphone, and Untold Static] from the New York Times, published June 21, 2006.

External links

 


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