Bringing Linux to the Masses
Just hours after Kevin Rose’s blog post today, announcing that the Digg algorithm has been changed in a way that would impact how stories were promoted. Kevin’s post, like most things on the Internet, was closely scrutinized and different blogs critical of Digg popped up everywhere. Blogs such as Brent, Bablin55, and Soshable created a lot of noise. (Coincidentally my post about “blind digging” was posted at around the time, but admittedly it had nothing to do with these events)
Top diggers saw all this as a move to suppress and penalize them for their popularity. Led by Andy (mrbabyman), Reg (zaibatsu), and Muhammed Saleem (msaleem) held an emergency session of their podcast The Drill Down with more than 120 participating in the session. After two hours of heated discussion, the majority agreed to boycott Digg for 4-5 days and possibly forever if Digg did not respond to their demands! Amazingly enough, founder Kevin Rose and CEO Jay Adelson showed up and were ready to have a heart to heart!
Kevin and Jay answered the revolter’s questions regarding the algorithm, unanswered e-mails, auto bury, among other things (click here, here and here for more details on the discussions) . The revolt seemed to be squashed faster than it started.
More than a few would probably disagree with me, but I think that Kevin and Jay failed to address the community’s concerns but shrewdly managed to lull the community:
The fire of the revolution might be extinguished and reduced to embers, but these embers still have traces of life in them! Don’t be surprised if it emerges again!!
Royal HeHe2-ness is a world where free software is valued, nay sought for!! While proprietary software is banished, degraded and ridiculed till the end of times.
robojiannis
January 24th, 2008 at 7:24 pm
I agree with you. They diplomatically restated the same material.
The question is who is in control of the digg network? The users, the top-users or the administrators?
babblin5
January 24th, 2008 at 8:33 pm
It was a stopgap measure to buy a little time, but I don’t think the revolt was squashed at all, just postponed until either a) Jay & Kev think better of the situation and dial the algorithm down or b) the boycott is retabled and put into action.
What can Mixx Learn From the Digg Revolt.
January 24th, 2008 at 10:00 pm
[...] http://mashable.com/2008/01/23/digg-revolt-again/ http://www.brentcsutoras.com/2008/01/23/200-diggs-1-voice-diggers-had-enough/ http://revoltnation.blogspot.com/2008/01/digg-is-game-lets-play-for-real-this.html http://soshable.com/digg-algorithm-change/ http://babblin5.com/2008/01/23/two-diggs-one-cup/ http://www.techipedia.com/2008/kevin-rose-and-jay-adelson-on-digg/ http://hehe2.net/social-media/digg-the-lulled-revolution/ [...]
The Great Digg Revolt of 2008 | Jeff Flowers.com
January 24th, 2008 at 10:48 pm
[...] ยป The Lulled Digg Revolution [...]
Digg Cartels: Is There Such A Thing? | Royal HeHe2-ness!
January 24th, 2008 at 11:48 pm
[...] revolution against Digg was staged, only to be extinguished quickly by Kevin Rose. Click here for more details. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. [...]
atropos
January 25th, 2008 at 1:20 am
@babblin5: yup buying time it is, just enough to spin the whole site off…I think all is not well in diggland…
@robojiannis: The users of course, it’s just that they (admins) don’t seem to realize it!