• CthulhusIntern [he/him]
    hexagon
    ·
    2 years ago

    This is starting to remind me of that point in Digg's history where all the comments were just people telling everyone to go to Reddit instead.

    • alexandra_kollontai [she/her]
      ·
      2 years ago

      That's hilarious, can you tell me about the context around why people left Digg? Too much of a zoomer to know what that is

      • yoink [she/her]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        there's a number of reasons, but the biggest was a redesign by Digg (Digg v4) that ended up prioritising power-users and large publishers over smaller sites and users, leading to a mass exodus of the userbase to Reddit, which at the time was seen as more democratic (this being 2010 before the incomprehensible horrors of the next decade burnt out all goodwill towards anything newer than Web 1.0). Reddit also had an autofeed of news and links that were fed via RSS to Digg, and users pushed really hard to upvote any reddit posts as a protest and a way of trying to get other users to migrate.

        interestingly, this happened at probably exactly the right time for Reddit's explosion in popularity to occur, if it never happened who knows how things would've shaped up

      • spectre [he/him]
        ·
        2 years ago

        I know there are a couple people with the details, but I think they did a new-reddit kinda move that was widely unpopular in an effort to try and extract profit from the site. I think there was also an aspect of a "recommended" feed that gave users less control over what they were shown.