Just last month Digg surpassed the 500,000 user mark, but the celebration has been stifled by the resignation of Digg’s top user. Digg was launched less than two years ago as a technology and science news site that gives users editorial control. Registered users vote or "digg" each other’s stories. Stories with the most votes are promoted to the front page. This model has been very successful. Digg has become a top site on the Internet rivaling traditional media outlets. It has prompted hundreds of copycats including Netscape and received millions in venture capital. Kevin Rose, the site creator, was featured on the August BusinessWeek cover.
Earlier this week a blogger accused top diggers of gaming the system. He watched the top stories over a couple of days and concluded that “a small ‘aristocracy’ controls the vast majority of the content that gets on Digg.” Digg has been accused of this before, but this time it struck a nerve. Kevin Rose responded by announcing a new algorithm. According to his blog, the “algorithm update will look at the unique digging diversity of the individuals digging the story. [To get promoted] a more diverse pool of individuals will be need to deem the story homepage-worthy.”
Digg’s top user, p9s50W5k4GUD2c6, responded to the changes by angrily announcing his resignation, “I bequeath my measly number one position to whoever wants to reign.” P9 has submitted 1,344 stories over the past seven months and half of them have been promoted to the front page. His resignation is significant because diggers are extremely loyal. Two months ago Jason Calacanis offered top diggers $1,000/month to post their stories to Netscape instead of Digg. Only three of the top twelve took him up on the offer. Most top diggers rejected the offer citing the strength of the Digg community. P9’s defection may signal fissures in the Digg loyalty.
Another top 5 user, Derek van Vilet, has also publicly expressed concerns about the algorithm change, “it sounds like it will take longer for stories to be promoted than it currently does and there are already so many great submissions that miss the boat….” In addition, he thinks that Rose has mishandled the algorithm change announcement, “I was particularly shocked at how he didn’t defend the top users against the flame war… he all but validated the idea that the top users are gaming Digg…” Several top users have removed their avatars in protest and support of P9.
This comes at a time when another popular social networking website, Facebook, is facing user rebellion. The democratic nature of social media is their biggest strength yet can also be their biggest problem. How should sites respond when their user base turns against them?
Similarly tagged OmniNerd content:
- Microsoft Auto Updates, by VnutZ over 2 years ago
- Virtual World - Real Terrorists, by willwaddell over 2 years ago
- FBI Uses Spyware to Crack Bomb Threat Case, by ldsudduth over 2 years ago
- Child Neglect Blamed on Parents' Video Game Obsession, by gnifyus over 2 years ago



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p9s50W5k4GUD2c6 responds by tomtolman :: NR5 :: Show
In my opinion, p9s50W5k4GUD2c6 is the top user of Digg for good reason. About a month ago I was looking at the homepage and noticed that he has 2 or 3 of the front page submissions at the time. His articles were always interesting. He has the ability to consistently find great stories from a wide variety of sources and submit them in a very timely manner. I dropped him an email and asked him how he was able to get such quality and quantity. He wrote me back with four tips on being successful on Digg. He said:
I added p9s50W5k4GUD2c6 as a ‘friend’ and watched his stories closer. Every story he submitted was quality. Good title, good headline and he linked to a wide variety of news sources and blogs. There is no doubt that he has invested a significant amount of time making Digg better and building the community in positive ways. When you add someone as a friend on Digg their submissions are highlighted with a different color. This draws your attention and makes it more likely that you will read and digg your friends submissions. Digg encourages this community building behavior.
This same community building behavior was interpreted as gaming by top users after a blog post Digg the rigged? A closer look at Digg’s democratic model. Kevin’s announcement about the algorithm change two days after this blog post gave readers the impression that he agreed that top users were gaming the system.
Since I’ve posted this article p9s50W5k4GUD2c6 has sent me an email with some more of his thoughts about the issue and some important corrections to my article. Here’s what he had to say:
The #33 Digg user, Curtiss Thompson, had many of the same things to say, in an email to Wired’s Michael Calore:
Right now there is a group of users on Digg burying stories submitted by top users in an effort to prevent top users from ‘gaming’ Digg. This is hurting the overall quality of the site because top stories are being buried. Kevin Rose has announced an algorithm change that will "will look at the unique digging diversity of the individuals digging the story." Perhaps if the algorithm also looks at the unique burying diversity of individuals burying the story then top users will no longer be unfairly targeted by Digg.
Jay Adelson, Digg CEO, responds to OmniNerd news post by tomtolman :: NR5 :: Show
Jay Adelson, Digg CEO, has commented on this post:
Basically it sounds like he agrees with what the top users are saying and this is a miscommunication problem that has spiraled out of control.
I suspect that if Jay Adelson feels this way we will see some sort of public statement very soon. I think it is a great response.
As a site note, it appears that the digg story for this OmniNerd article has already been buried by people marking it lame or a duplicate. That’s too bad.
Many TOP Diggers are just Submiting Good Stories with Good Titles and Descriptions by SearchEngines :: NR0 :: Show
What is meant by a TOP DIGGER?
Many Top Diggers are just submitting Good Stories – a percentage become homepage popular – they are NOT involved any conspiracy whatsoever
http://digg.com/users/searchengines/homepage
Many Stories on the Homepage get Hundreds and Sometimes THOUSANDS of Diggs.
Can you really have THAT many people around the world who are all virtually strangers, involved in a conspiracy?
The Title and Description used is very influential. And so is the SITE being Digged, Webmasters sometimes INVITE Diggs by placing conspicious "Digg This" or Reddit This" or "Delicious This" links.
As with any innovative Web 2.0 concept, it has to be tweaked and chiseled to perfection.
Kinda like the rise of the A-list bloggers, no? by Anonymous :: NR0 :: Show
I don’t know how many of you here are old enough to remember back to 2002, but I remember the launch of blogger and typepad, and I remember reading weblogs over the period of time between 2002 and 2004, and I remember how quickly there developed an A-list of bloggers. The guys who were going to conventions and writing and being written up in side-columns for major news media websites. Those people all linked each other, and how is linking to someone significantly different from digging, in the narrow case of promoting something you like?
The establishment of a hierarchy isn’t gaming the system, it’s an inevitable result of any social system.