Member: Opini

Opini was surprised to get a gift membership. SG subs ploy? If not, thanks.

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Member: Opini
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About Me

I let my membership slip away for a bit, and I just received a three month gift membership from an Anonymous person. I suspect it might have been a ploy by SG.com to bring me back when a series of pleading e-mails failed, but who knows? If not, I'm guessing it was a random act of kindness because I don't really know anyone here personally. Either way, thanks.

My favourite part of SG is probably my favourites page, and all the photos in it. It's not just looking at the pics that I like - I love scrolling through the mass of colourful, beautiful thumbnails too.
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JULY 16, 2007 @ 08:01 AM | NO COMMENTS


So, I loved Digg. I still think it's pretty awesome, but it just doesn't do it for me like it did before.

Here are some reasons why:

1) People are using it to submit stupid shit, rather than news. For instance:


What's the problem with this? Well, on a personal level, I don't find them at all interesting. I sincerely doubt that someone has actually checked every road in India and ascertained that these are indeed, the 10 most beautiful. I also don't really care much about a Hawk picking up a coyote; I looked at it, it was interesting for a millisecond, but it really did nothing for me. I especially don't give a $#!^ about LOLCATS. In fact, they make me want to be cruel to little cats, and create pictures of them with captions like "I'M IN YOUR OVENZ, BURNING MYSELF ALIVE!".

More importantly though, it's ruining what Digg was, and should be. Digg carved out a previously-unfilled niche in the Internet: Social news networking. It was revolutionary, and it brought a degree of control and substance back to the individual. I hoped it was going to be a medium that balanced both information and public discussion. Why would this be important? Well, as Al Gore explained in his excellent book The Assault on Reason, the American political system is collapsing and displaying more and more signs of partisanship and corruption as it displays fewer and fewer signs of reason and public engagement. As Gore explained, this can be traced back to the increasingly concentrated ownership of media assets, and the decreasingly democratic means of political communication. In other words, there is no public forum. However, Digg could be that forum. When important news is 'discovered' and shared by individuals, and discussed in a public forum (i.e. on Digg's comments page), the problem of corporations' information oligopoly is resolved. However, if people begin filling Digg pages with insignificant distractions...
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