Culture Digg Returns, With Social Media in Tumult - Two decades after creating Digg, a community-focused social message board, Kevin Rose is reviving the site and teaming up with a founder of Reddit.

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Alexis Ohanian, left, a founder of Reddit, and Kevin Rose, who founded Digg, in Los Angeles. The two have teamed up to revive Digg, which was popular in the Web 2.0 era. Maggie Shannon for The New York Times

By Mike Isaac
Mike Isaac has lurked on digital message boards since the 1990s and has used Reddit and Digg since 2009.
March 5, 2025

In the summer of 2005, Alexis Ohanian, a tech entrepreneur, sent an email to his colleague Steve Huffman with an ominous subject line: “Meet the enemy.”

The body of the email contained just one line — a link to Digg, a community-focused social message board where people shared and discussed news articles and links to other sites they found interesting. Mr. Ohanian and Mr. Huffman, who had founded a similar effort called Reddit, set their competitive sights on Digg and its founder, Kevin Rose.

In the 20 years since, these entrepreneurs have gone onto other projects and, in true Silicon Valley fashion, dipped into other parts of tech. Along the way, Digg, which went from popular to not, all but died.

On Wednesday, Mr. Rose announced that he had bought back Digg for an undisclosed sum from Money Group, a digital media company, and would rebuild it to take on Reddit. And he is doing it with an unlikely ally: Mr. Ohanian.

“This is the perfect time to revisit this idea with fresh eyes,” Mr. Rose, 48, now a venture capitalist at True Ventures, said in an interview. He said social media had become so ubiquitous that “it doesn’t need to be winner take all,” adding that “we don’t need to take down Reddit to win.”

Mr. Rose and Mr. Ohanian, 41, are relaunching Digg when social media is in tumult. Elon Musk, who bought Twitter in 2022 and renamed it X, has turned the platform into a mirror of himself. Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, is becoming more video-focused to compete with TikTok. And Reddit, which went public a year ago, has added gamelike features to nudge users into spending more time on the site — and more time looking at advertising.

Amid this upheaval, Mr. Rose and Mr. Ohanian sensed an opportunity to reinvent Digg in a way that could cut through some of the pitfalls of modern social media and focus on “connection and humanity” online.

“The world has changed so much in the past few years,” Mr. Ohanian, who left Reddit’s board in 2020, said in an interview. “When Kevin told me he was buying back Digg, there was a part of me that thought, ‘Well, damn, could we do it again?’”

Not long ago, Digg was on top of the world. Founded in 2004, it was among a class of early social news sites, such as Slashdot, del.icio.us and Reddit, that relied on a community of unpaid users to curate articles or topics of interest from across the web. Digg stood out for its robust user base of active contributors, who regularly returned to the site.

The company raised tens of millions of dollars and fielded acquisition offers from Google and others. In 2006, Mr. Rose posed for a now-infamous photo on a BusinessWeek cover, sporting a wide grin and giving two thumbs up, with the headline “How This Kid Made $60 Million in 18 Months.” (Mr. Rose hated the photo.)

The cover proved ill fated. Digg later launched a redesign of its site that its community widely rejected. Users eventually left in droves, as did executives. Mr. Rose left Digg in 2012. That same year, the company was divvied up and sold for parts to Betaworks, LinkedIn and The Washington Post.

In contrast, Reddit became a viable business. Mr. Huffman, who had left the site for other projects, returned in 2015 and stabilized the company. Now 41, he has made Reddit’s once laissez faire content moderation policies more stringent, leading advertisers to embrace the site.

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Mr. Ohanian with his Reddit co-founder, Steve Huffman, in 2016. Reddit went public last year. David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

Some of those changes generated a backlash. Some Reddit moderators of “subreddits,” the forums dedicated to topics like guitars or basketball or cute puppies, said they felt neglected by management. In 2023, hundreds of subreddits went dark after several executive decisions upset moderators, threatening Reddit’s business.

Seeing the uproar, Mr. Rose, who had dabbled in investing and other start-ups, decided to act. He was itching to get back to his roots in social and community sites, he said, and always regretted the way things had ended with Digg.

“I look back on how that company was run, and I was just very fearful to stand up for myself in a lot of cases,” Mr. Rose recalled. “I just didn’t have the maturity to go out and ask the tough questions.”

Mr. Rose began laying the groundwork for a Digg comeback. He ran thousands of dollars’ worth of targeted ads across Reddit with detailed questionnaires for moderators, asking about the biggest difficulties overseeing subreddits and other issues. He ran the results through an artificial intelligence program to think of new ways for addressing the problems.

“These moderators are pouring their lives into this,” he said. “We think we can do it better.”

He also reached out to Mr. Ohanian, with whom he had bonded over the scars of running their platforms. Mr. Ohanian said he had “all love” for his former company. “At the end of the day, Reddit was a huge part of my life,” he said.

Mr. Rose and Mr. Ohanian raised an undisclosed amount of funding to repurchase Digg and to build a new version of the company. Their investors include True Ventures, where Mr. Rose is a partner, and Seven Seven Six, a venture firm founded by Mr. Ohanian.

They also hired fewer than a dozen engineers and designers for the new Digg and brought on Justin Mezzell, a longtime collaborator of Mr. Rose’s, to be chief executive. Mr. Rose and Mr. Ohanian will join Digg’s board, with Mr. Rose as chair.

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Mr. Rose, right, hosting a webcast in 2006. He said he had always regretted the way things ended with Digg. Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Invitations to the new Digg will be distributed in the coming weeks, they said, and the site will primarily be aimed at people on mobile devices. A.I. will also play a larger part in making Digg more accessible to users, Mr. Rose said. For instance, he said, a community of science-fiction enthusiasts could have their discussions translated into Klingon, the language used by the “Star Trek” alien race of the same name. A.I. tools can also help reduce spam, misinformation and harassment, he said.

Less glamorous — but perhaps most important — will be their attention to moderators. Mr. Ohanian and Mr. Rose said they wanted to empower moderators with better tools to help maintain online communities, which keeps the site welcoming to users.

“What we never focused on is the back end,” Mr. Ohanian said, referring to the tools and features that moderators lean on. “But it’s the back end that really, really matters.”

The initial reaction to Digg’s relaunch may be muted, Mr. Rose said, with some people likely to see the resurrection as a cute nod to a retro version of the social web. But he has grand plans, he said.

“Because there are so many giants in this space that are going to be slow to move, it means that we can be nimble,” Mr. Rose said. “We won’t have everything we want Digg to be on Day 1. But a year from now, we will be having a very different conversation.”

Source (Archive)
 
The good thing about Digg coming back with a goal of being better than Reddit is that Reddit is a shining example of what to avoid.
-Keep troons out of your staff.
-Be politically neutral.
-Champion free speech.
-Keep a cap on shitty intrusive ads.
 
Digg, like early Reddit, relied on a whole Internet that existed beyond its borders. That doesn't exist anymore. Reality is it will just be a shittier version of modern Reddit with the jannies running the show.
The prevailing zeitgeist of the Internet up until the early 2010's was that it existed as it's own thing unique from the physical world.
If someone called you a "retarded faggot" it was clear to the vast majority of people that it was in jest or was something they could simply brush off.

The mass adoption of the touchscreen smartphone is what brought the end to this. Everything on the capital I Internet was now seen as an extension of yourself. The average normalfag and user of Reddit can't distinguish in the language processing center of their brain words on a screen versus someone saying something to them in real life.

Combined with mass centralization and corporate interests we are now where we are today.
 
The good thing about Digg coming back with a goal of being better than Reddit is that Reddit is a shining example of what to avoid.
-Keep troons out of your staff.
-Be politically neutral.
-Champion free speech.
-Keep a cap on shitty intrusive ads.
-Make posts show numbers of both upvotes and downvotes
-Don't manipulate vote numbers
-Moderators of any given group must have names/status publicly displayed, no stealth mods
-No shadowbans, either tell people they are banned or don't ban.
-IP ban specific places where gov't paid shills (of any country) are known to work at.
-Rangeban India
 
The good thing about Digg coming back with a goal of being better than Reddit is that Reddit is a shining example of what to avoid.
-Keep troons out of your staff.
-Be politically neutral.
-Champion free speech.
-Keep a cap on shitty intrusive ads.
Two things:
-Alexis Ohanian being involved means absolutely none of that will happen, since he oversaw the widespread sanitization of the site and increasingly intrusive attempts to monetize it
-Ross' ideas for how to be better than reddit being sourced from surveys of existing reddit jannies filtered through a chatGPT aggregator means in all likelihood, neo-Digg will just be the Bluesky to reddit's Twitter and bilk venture capitalists for seed funding until they can trick Wall Street into buying stock.
 
The mass adoption of the touchscreen smartphone is what brought the end to this. Everything on the capital I Internet was now seen as an extension of yourself. The average normalfag and user of Reddit can't distinguish in the language processing center of their brain words on a screen versus someone saying something to them in real life.
As much as I hate smartphones, they're a correlation. Social networks are to blame.

The "everything is an extension of yourself" is the definition of the social network (a reminder: a social network isn't just a stupid gay all-purpose site, it's a site where different aspects of your personality and interests should meet and be searchable, and people should be reachable through a series of different connections), and the purpose of that is to make profiles more valuable to advertisers. It's "bring your whole self to work" squared, because now you have to bring your whole self everywhere. Social networks actively discourage the creation of multiple profiles per user. Various "communities" and businesses moved onto social networks, to engage with users on the same terms despite their very different demands.

For that reason, getting called faggot on the online on a social network is worse than getting called faggot IRL, because the online will stay forever, to be seen by your friends, parents, children, employers and employees, potential romantic interests, etc. Normalfags are correct. The guilty party are businesses and community organizers who force their members/customers onto social networks.

Yes, smartphones are terrible and played their role in making the Internet worse (forms of content / pivot to video, "this page looks better in the app", etc). But stores still have their own websites, normalfags shop just fine, they would have learned to maintain separate identities just fine, but corporate users of social networks forced "bring your whole self" on them.
 
We had social networks before smartphones, but you needed a computer to use them. Guess who didn't have computers in the 80s, 90s, and 2000s? Blacks and Indians.
Don't forget teenagers, unless they were nerds. Having your own laptop was still considered something only rich people and tech enthusiasts did as late as the early 2000s. You had to go sit down at a computer to use the internet, which for most kids meant sitting in the living room in full display of their parents.
 
This version of Digg will end up being Reddit's Bluesky, just watch. R/FuckCars is already bitching about how current year Reddit isn't enough of a hugbox and is a carbrain fascist site because apparently spez is buddies with Elon
 
This version of Digg will end up being Reddit's Bluesky, just watch. R/FuckCars is already bitching about how current year Reddit isn't enough of a hugbox and is a carbrain fascist site because apparently spez is buddies with Elon
Or the leftist redditors' version of Voat, which was full of schizos and full blown fedposters. Who knows what insanity the r/fuckcars crowd would come up with if given an even bigger echo chamber.
 
Wasn't Kevin Rose one of the hosts on TechTV before it got turned into G4 or am I remembering shit wrong? Cause if it is the guy came off as a shit head even amongst the other shit heads.
 
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Wasn't Kevin Rose one of the hosts on TechTV before it got turned into G4 or am I remembering shit wrong? Cause if it is the guy came off as a shit head even amongst the other shit heads.
Yes he was, and yes he was.
 
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