blog.wired.com — There are a few things Digg CEO Jay Adelson would like to get off his chest. First of all, the so-called "Digg revolt" that took place last night? It wasn't really a revolt, he says.I hope that the next time a small group of users voice their concerns, it's not represented as a 'mass movement' or a 'revolt.'"
Jan 25, 2008 View in Crawl 4
sotopheavyJan 26, 2008
hmmm...hmm...hmm oh, now I see what you did there.
threetoedkoalaJan 27, 2008
Even if the algo changes in a way that hurts those at the top - a new breed of digg gamers will emerge eventually custom built for the new algo until the next change.
infangoJan 29, 2008
bye bye top diggers welcome Nev top digger
xen1gmaFeb 5, 2008
^I concur.
Closed AccountDec 31, 2008
"After nearly a couple hours of debate, it was decided that they would boycott the site. They backed down from the plan, though, when Digg founder Kevin Rose and Jay Adelson showed up and talked them down from it."I hope I'm not the only one that got pissed from reading this? If they're users like the rest of us and not "power users" why the hell would Kevin and Jay Adelson THEMSELVES show up to talk them out of it? That is f**kin' bulls**t, if Mr. BabyMan and his butt buddies want to leave let them, they've helped Digg dish out the crap that it's been getting on a silver plate.I want a response Kevin, we all want a response, why them?Make it good. I understand "it's just the internet" but "it's just your job" don't you take that seriously?