• @Airazz
    link
    91 year ago

    A lot of these issues are temporary. Also, this is all happening very fast, it’s entirely possible that some other website/service will pop up that’ll be a lot better thought out.

    Reddit was already well established and functional during the Exodus of Digg, so there wasn’t much discussion about where to go. Today we have no solid alternative, so people are trying Lemmy, Kbin, Mastodon, Squabbles and other websites.

      • @Airazz
        link
        51 year ago

        They let corporations submit blog posts (company spam, basically) and they’d instantly go to the top, pushing any normal submissions down into oblivion. Management thought that more ads will get them more revenue, but instead everyone just left.

      • Stovetop
        link
        fedilink
        31 year ago

        It was a combination of factors.

        They redesigned the website, which was a complete wipe of the service. All your submissions, comments, etc. Gone. That upset a lot of people.

        They also changed their algorithm to prioritize paid promotional content over user submitted content, and they created a “power user” class whose content and liked articles would be more likely to reach the front page, too.

      • @tool
        link
        21 year ago

        They changed the look and layout of the site dramatically, and also altered how things eventually ended up on the front page. It was in an effort to make more money via advertising/paid posts, and it literally killed the site overnight.

        Reddit is doing their best Digg v4 impression right now. History doesn’t repeat itself, but it sure as fuck rhymes.