• Welcome to ROFLMAO.com—the ultimate destination for unfiltered discussions and endless entertainment! Whether it’s movies, TV, music, games, or whatever’s on your mind, this is your space to connect and share. Be funny. Be serious. Be You. Don’t just watch the conversation—join it now and be heard!

news Digg is coming back, thanks to its founder — and Reddit’s

A thread covering the latest news on trends, groundbreaking technologies, and digital innovations reshaping the tech landscape.
Sometime last fall, Kevin Rose started thinking seriously about Diggagain. A smidge over two decades ago, he’d launched a social and link sharing website that, for years, was known as “the homepage of the internet.” Since then, Digg had been through several owners and many pivots, Rose had gone on to several other careers, and the internet had moved on. Rose had thought about building something like Digg again, and had even been approached to buy back the domain and website a few times, but the timing had never been right.
This time, though, things started to click. Rose and a group of what he calls “brainstorming partners,” which included Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, design and product exec Justin Mezzell, and even folks like Blogger and Twitter cofounder Ev Williams, started to talk about whether AI might be able to help them build a better social platform. “I would call Alexis up and we would chat,” Rose says, “and we’d be like, ‘hey, what if, what if, what if?’ And a lot of those things started giving us both that butterflies-in-the-stomach situation, where you’re like, ‘oh, this could be cool. This could be really cool.’”
Now, Digg is making a comeback. Rose will be its chair, Mezzell its CEO, and Ohanian an adviser. (Both Rose and Ohanian are also venture capitalists now, and their firms are investing in the new venture.) They bought the domain and other assets from Money Group for a price they wouldn’t disclose and are bringing it back. The site is relaunching today, but only in a limited form. Its ultimate ambitions, however, are enormous: Digg aims to build the kind of community-first social platform that basically no longer exists on the internet. And its new founding team thinks AI could be the secret to pulling it off.

you’ve been on the internet long enough to remember the old Digg, you already have a rough idea of how the new Digg will work. Everything is based on content and links: someone shares a link, and people can comment and vote on the links. (If you like something, you “Digg” it; the old “Bury” downvote option is now gone.) The most popular stuff ends up on the homepage — which Rose and Mezzell tell me they hope will once again be the homepage of the internet — but there will also be countless smaller communities surfacing and sharing stuff in their own niche.
There are, of course, plenty of ways to talk about links on the internet. One of them, Reddit, continues to be very popular! The team isn’t shy about the comparison but thinks that by better engaging with the community, and without the growth-at-all-costs requirements of being a public company, they can build something that takes better care of its users. If Digg does this right, the homepage will feel like Old Digg, and everything else might feel like Better Reddit.
Rose says he and Ohanian are both convinced — and both learned the hard way — that the real trick, the thing nobody has yet done properly, is to give the communities the tools they actually need to operate. This is where AI comes in. So much of a moderator’s job, Rose says, is just grunt work: fighting spam, reviewing obvious policy violations, litigating pointless fights. “How can we remove the janitorial work of moderators and community managers,” he says, “and convert what they do every day into more of a kind of ‘director of vibes, culture and community’ than someone that is just sitting there doing the laborious crappy stuff that comes in through the front door?”
The real trick is to give the communities the tools they actually need to operate
The new Digg, Rose says, will include lots of AI-forward ways to sort through and make decisions on content. He also hopes AI can be used for fun. “I’m just making stuff up here, but there’s everything from an AI agent that converts your entire sub-community into Klingon, to another one where you don’t allow a certain type of profanity and that’s automatically auto-moderated.” Users will be able to tap AI models to build stuff right in their communities, too. “If we can create more of a dynamic canvas where agents are layered on top to assist, to help, to do wild things, to create games, to do whatever that community wants them to do, then we have something,” Rose says.
The new Digg, if the team does it right, should feel more like a community-driven art project than an old-school internet forum. But Rose and Mezzell both say the whole thing depends on doing what users want — and nothing else. “One of the things that I believe that made Digg, and makes Reddit, a special place on the internet,” Rose says, “is that there are humans behind the scenes with real opinions, real conversation, real stories that they find interesting. The second you start to sterilize that, you’re just an aggregator of information. You’re a fancy RSS reader with some voting on it.”
One big challenge, Mezzell says, is figuring out how to reward and promote users for doing good work. Digg won’t show how many followers you have because that creates bad incentives; same with competing to be the most-“Dugg” person on the platform. “There are all these very simple systems that we already have, for commenting systems and branching and all that stuff. But even if we start there, we cannot stop asking the question about how to give people the respect for being really insightful, for being really encouraging, for being really funny.” He doesn’t have a perfect answer for it yet, but he knows that’s key to making it work.
There’s a lot more that the new Digg team doesn’t have a perfect answer for yet. Rose and Mezzell both say, a few times each, that what’s launching today is essentially a prototype. It’ll have a homepage, a few sub-communities, some links, some comments, and that’s about it. The goal is to get people excited that Digg is back, and then both introduce them to the new platform and build it alongside them. “If you come on day one,” Rose says, it’s 99.9 percent nostalgia and you’re like, damn, this is like a slightly updated version of Digg that looks really cool.” Give it some time — maybe even just a few weeks, if the new team ships as fast as Mezzell promises — and it’ll be something different.

Source: https://www.theverge.com/social/624073/digg-relaunch-2025
 
When I was active on HubPages, I used a lot of bookmarking sites including Digg and I managed to rope on some traffic on a regular basis. However, as I stopped publishing on Hubpages and focused on writing for clients, I also stopped using these services. I am not sure if Digg would be able to get the same level of popularity as it used to.
StumbleUpon rebranded and came back as Mix still I don't see it being used.
 
Omg, I used to spend hours on Digg in its heyday, searching for cool stuff and just mingling with the community. It's certainly amazing to know that Kevin Rose is revamping the platform.

It would be cool to see how Digg changes to fit the social media landscape of today. Can the aura be recreated as in the old days, or will it carve itself a new niche?
 
Omg, I used to spend hours on Digg in its heyday, searching for cool stuff and just mingling with the community. It's certainly amazing to know that Kevin Rose is revamping the platform.

It would be cool to see how Digg changes to fit the social media landscape of today. Can the aura be recreated as in the old days, or will it carve itself a new niche?
I don’t see digg carving a new niche. It’s a forum and will compete directly with Reddit.

It’ll stick with its root, but the question remains, will it put a dent in Reddit’s daily traffic?

 
Honestly, I am not sure whether trying to revive Digg would be the greatest idea. The internet has changed so much even now that Reddit, Twitter, and Facebook define the social atmosphere. How do you think Digg will be competitive among them?
Digg paved the way for Reddit’s success, so there’s plenty of space for them to come back.

Underestimating the value of a forum isn’t something that we should do as Digg Still has loyal supporters and fans.

There are some people that don’t agree with what’s going on with Reddit currently, especially with their plans to introduce a pay wall system.

Therefore, I see Digg’s reintroduction being a great thing.

Competition brings the best out of everyone. Digg will do just fine.
 
A new speak peak of Digg has been released.

This was spotted on a Reddit post: https://www.reddit.com/r/RedditAlternatives/s/8cgjPV3Daj

Kevin Rose shared this corner of a screenshot of the interface for the new Digg. Lots of connection to the original Digg from back in the day, including a leaderboard. They're doing things to make the leaderboard less exclusive than before, so the default view will be 24 hours instead of all-time.

They're focusing on transparency and making it easy to see why you're being shown the things you're being shown.

Gem Finders isn't explained yet, but I'm guessing it's something like people who unearth the best stories.

They're not using followers as a metric because it's gamed too easily by bots and such, trying to focus instead on quality of interactions.

In his voiceover, Kevin said he wants to use AI in a way that's helpful for discovery, but "we don't want to use AI to make things too sterile. Not something that takes over and makes it just seem like an algorithm feeding you more of what you already know."


IMG_6287.webp
 
There used to be this SEO scam (trick) where you could post a Digg and it would boost your website to the top of Google for less competitive terms. :p
I remember this. It’ll probably work on the new version of Digg too. It applies to Reddit now as well, but it depends on the subreddit that you post on.

However, it can generally work on any sub😂
 
I'm not into scams.
I don’t recall reddit being a scam nor Reddit.

They’re both great for building backlinks. A lot of people use them for building backlinks.

Infact, it’s also encouraged by many seo experts.

 
I don’t recall reddit being a scam nor Reddit.

They’re both great for building backlinks. A lot of people use them for building backlinks.

Infact, it’s also encouraged by many seo experts.

I'm saying it light-heartedly, but, really, I've tried stuff like that before. Well, I did do domain name matching. That used to work. For instance, if you were targeting "used cars in florida", you could make a site named UsedCarsInFlorida.biz (or .net, .com, whatever).
 
I'm saying it light-heartedly, but, really, I've tried stuff like that before. Well, I did do domain name matching. That used to work. For instance, if you were targeting "used cars in florida", you could make a site named UsedCarsInFlorida.biz (or .net, .com, whatever).
I agree, exact domain names are still a vital important of seo, but they're not as important as they used to be.

They're changed over the years. Now, it's mainly about being providing value and being an authoritative site, especially by providing top notch content in your particular niche and out performing your compeititors.

The search engines haven't been loving certain type of websites over the years, especially blogs, business sites, nor affiliate websites, but forums are ranking well.

But that's all thanks to Reddit.
 
Back
Top