blog.digg.com — Because there's so much that happens beneath the surface of Digg, we've been working on new ways to expose the most interesting stories to more people. Today we're launching a new homepage voting experiment called Digg Trends which will surface certain highly active stories as they're trending to Digg's homepage.
Nov 4, 2009 View in Crawl 4
1jaxstate1Nov 4, 2009
I saw it flash for about 30 seconds and it disappeared.
cardsNov 4, 2009
I guess I just think it gives groups on either side of an issue the opportunity to disproportionately affect what makes it to the front page vs the general digg population. Imagine a scenario where a controversial story is surfaced. People on either side can spring to action, contact one another, and push their side of the issue. If the story isn't highlighted, (like it's always been in upcoming), these groups don't have a single story to focus their energy on, meaning it's harder for them to out-vote the general digg population.Whenever these ideas come up on how to get a better, fairer front page, I always go back to the idea that *the* solution is customized front pages for every user. If there's no such thing as *the* front page, there's less motivation to game it.
myonoskenNov 5, 2009
Why the f**k does it matter what is added to the page if your browser is already open?
diggsterbuddyNov 17, 2009
This is filed under " You gut to do what you have to do ".Ad space on a web page = TrendyFolks will see them the same way you slow down to see a car wreck on the highway.ads pay the bills so we get to see a great web site, right :)It's not like we are drinking water from a fire hose. lol
richardcavessaDec 5, 2009
is it the ms/yahoo crossover ?
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