News Aggregator Site Digg Is Returning, With an AI Twist
Digg, the website launched in the second half of 2004 has been a while One of the most popular websites on the internetis making a comeback. Original founder Kevin Rose changed hands several times over the years and said Digg will soon restart with a new CEO, new AI capabilities, and an unlikely consultant: Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian. At its peak, Digg and Reddit were Major competitors.
A new homepage reboot.digg.com With a Digg voting box, visitors can click (more than 190,000 clicks from the beginning of this article writing) and a read email registration box, which reads “Register when invitations go online as well as early access”.
A few months ago, Ross Discussed Digg’s legacythe website The Verge’s Internet 2.0 era darling. He said an immature network, troublesome expansion and the rise of social media networks such as Twitter led to the fall of Digg.
“I feel like we could have been a better version of Slashdot and continue to dominate and is a huge, huge source of technology,” Ross said.
He added: “If you can figure out who owns Digg, I’d love to buy it from them and turn it back to that old-fashioned homepage. I’d lean over in this area into AI – AI for review and AI for many different things to do with AI.”
Need news about you in Klingon?
This seems to be happening, and the new version of DIGG will obviously lean towards AI capabilities to help users find content, or view content in a different way. What’s the difference? perhaps Watch in KlingonRoss said.
Digg’s new CEO will be designer Justin Mezzell, and Rose will serve as chairman of the company.
Digg became the universality of a synthesizer that was news, interesting or simply linked to content around the Internet. It allows users to share and recommend content and then click on the rising (dig) or fall (Bury) to vote in the ranking.
Originally, the general directory of web content expanded to areas including technology, business and games. In 2012, Digg is sold As the brand enters a company called Betaworks, 15 employees went to a Washington Post project called Code3, and Digg’s patent will be used for LinkedIn.
Even if restarted Soon after, Digg never returned to his glorious era in terms of popularity.