Comments on: Digg's Kevin Rose: We've got to be more than a fanboy hub
The Web 2.0 poster boy, in his keynote address at the Future of Web Apps conference in London, says that Digg's goal now is personalization and becoming globally relevant.
The Web 2.0 poster boy, in his keynote address at the Future of Web Apps conference in London, says that Digg's goal now is personalization and becoming globally relevant.
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It's like Bush playing golf? What?
That is a great example of the kind of thing that prevents DIGG from being taken seriously.
Grow up and come to the adult's table.
I used to check out Digg all the time, but that's the exact reason why I stopped going there. What's sad is I just loaded up Digg, and the top stories include a story about the iPhone and about Obama.
I'll stick with Slashdot, thanks.
/P
For fun, Digg should do what Youtube did, and take this idea from XKCD http://xkcd.com/481/
Other than that, if he wants to raise the level of discourse, then any comment containing the word "fanboy" should be subject to moderation before posting. The people who use it are mainly interested in insulting, not discussing.
http://blogs.computerworld.com/kevin_rose_personal
If Digg has decided that it needs to make itself more relevant, then one thing it can do is to find a way to encourage more engaging discourse in the comments, without resorting to censoring. If the commenters grow up, then people who have something intelligent and useful to say won't be afraid to say it.
- by tamarweinberg October 10, 2008 10:03 AM PDT
- If Digg wants to do better, they need to get rid of their community management team and its leadership under Jen Burton and find a community manager who actually acknowledges the impact of the community on Digg's success.
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