Digg’s Kevin Rose: We’ve Got to Be More Than a Fanboy Hub
Digg founder Kevin Rose had a message for the audience at the Future of Web Apps conference on Thursday: It’s time to grow up.
“We have to do better,” he said in his talk, called “The Future of News,” and said that it’s time for the social news site that he founded in 2004 to to expand beyond the geek set and get some real-world relevance. “Why click a button and make the number go up by one? Why does that matter?”
Digg, after all, gets more than 30 million monthly visitors, but Rose said that the site only has slightly over three million registered user accounts–those are the people actually “Digging.” That indirectly confirmed what Digg critics have been saying all along: that it’s reflective of only a tiny and vocal subset of the Web, resulting in a heavy bias toward anything iPhone, anything Linux, anything Barack Obama, and plenty of wacky local news stories.




Comments
Methinks they should have sold sooner.
Calacanas tried to build a Digg for Adults at AOL. Whatever happened to that? It was boring and demonstrated that a highly moderated social news service that attempts to keep the kids out can be just as dysfunctional as the free-for-all.
Posted by Mac Beach at October 10th, 2008 at 11:07 am