• @auzy@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    33 months ago

    That’s not what happened at all imho.

    What killed digg realistically is that it had less control than Reddit and because Kevin Rose blocked posts about the DVD encryption codes and people over reacted to that block. For days digg was full of people simply reposting them (as Digg was worried about getting sued which was fair enough)

    Didn’t really have anything to do with politics.

    Don’t forget, this was back in the day of fat people hate and Reddit hosting child porn. Reddit administration was never great

    Digg admins were actually ok and I never had an issue with them

    • @ameancow@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      23 months ago

      Don’t forget, this was back in the day of fat people hate and Reddit hosting child porn. Reddit administration was never great

      Reddit in the earliest days was basically 4chan but less controlled and more spread-out. There were thousands of illegal and horrifyingly abusive subreddits. Every single time one got taken down, it was this massive, whinging drama show from thousands of chuds screaming about their “rights” and “censorship.”

      By the time admins came for the less overtly evil ones, like the weirdly prevalent communities dedicated to fantasizing about punching particular people in the face, reddit had very much become the WalMart of the internet. Not the cleanest or nicest place to visit, but it certainly had everything and was convenient if you needed a fix at odd hours.

      I don’t even remember Digg but I remember it seemed relatively short-lived in the early days of the explosion of forum sites. A lot of people were trying to strike gold with the next big thing as internet popularity was soaring. There are likely hundreds of other big sites like Digg that people used to frequent that have also since died in the mass-extinction events of the 2010’s and beyond.