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3.2: Can you Digg it?

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    305673
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    Web 2.0 loves the wisdom of the crowd and few sites illustrate that better than Digg. Along with the venerable geek site Slashdot and newcomers Reddit and Newsvine, these news sites rely on readers to submit and promote articles from other Web sites. So the sites — while widely considered to be news sources (all but Newsvine concentrate on technology) — actually publish no news. Digg users find interesting content elsewhere online, then submit the links and summaries on Digg for consideration, then other Digg users “vote” for stories they like by giving them Diggs. If a story gets enough Diggs, it ends up on the front page of the site.

    clipboard_ef644378e4edf6c5d97667c38471d43d6.png

    Digg.com’s News page.

    The Digg effect can be seen on many mainstream news sites that have added a list of the most read, most e-mailed or most printed stories to their Web sites. While they clearly aren’t ready to surrender all news judgment to the crowd, most Web editors recognize there’s power in what others have found interesting on the site instead of solely relying on their more traditional view of what’s news.


    This page titled 3.2: Can you Digg it? is shared under a CC BY-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mark Briggs via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.