With an estimated 75,000 new blogs created every day, the sheer volume of information—particularly news and commentary—is absolutely overwhelming. As such, many (if not most) web users turn to the bookmarking sites to help them separate the wheat from the chaff, so to speak. And why not? Supposedly the Diggs of the world are open forums where any material can be bookmarked and raised to front-page status by the very worth—or at least novelty—of its content as determined by the community. Fantastic! No corporate overlords or press corps controls to inhibit what the people read! Viva la Revolucion!!
Ah, not so fast my friends: enter the “Digg 100”, as I’ve dubbed them (hey, if they’re going to be infamous, they may as well have a cool gang name). As Rand posted a while back, the top 100 Digg users are responsible for nearly 60% of front-page content on the site. This begs the question: If a small, powerful handful of people are seemingly in control of which content is readily accessible to the public, how is Digg any different from mainstream, corporate media?
Are the Digg 100 the new media overlords? Are they the new Rupert Murdoch? Well, considering their apparent power to promote or bury bookmarks and thus the content that manages to see the light of day, the comparison may not be without merit. The Digg 100 may even be more powerful in a sense because they by-and-large avoid the scrutiny (especially via the blogosphere) placed upon the most powerful publishing and media framers. They manage to hide behind the visage of democracy that is the supposed foundation of the social bookmarking sites. They control a media outlet that many people trust to be totally egalitarian in nature, but in reality appears to be greatly influenced by a very small cabal of power-users.
It may be true that the Digg 100 don’t truly move stories to the front page by themselves. However, the incredible influence they carry, the friend networks they have in place and the frequency of their posting make them the tastemakers among the community. They’ve managed to create dominance and a leadership role that virtually gives them editorial control over the majority of content that the casual Digg user will see. For an excellent analysis of the group think, conformity, and other factors that allow the Digg 100 to lead the flock, see this article at shmula.
That is not to say the Digg 100 are a malevolent force attempting to consciously advance only posts that feed into their goal of world domination, but the potential is there. Not only is human bias an inevitable factor when these users decide what they feel is worthy of being Dugg (see the Bob Massa interview for a great take on bias), but corporate interests are bound to take notice of this phenomenon and exploit it as best they can.
Even the horned-beast Murdoch himself has already taken note of the power of social networking and bookmarking sites. Upon purchasing Intermix (parent company of Myspace) Murdoch noted that, “Young people don't want to rely on a God-like figure from above to tell them what's important." Murdoch clearly realizes that community-managed, user-submitted content sites such as Myspace present a certain illusion of freedom, honesty, and trustworthiness that most people don’t ascribe to Fox News.
So what happens when the Rupert Murdochs of the world realize that by controlling (or replacing) groups like the Digg 100, they can advance their agendas and media stranglehold into the last free market of ideas? While people may not want a God-like figure feeding them their news, apparently few take notice of a man (or group) behind the curtain. This is the true problem that faces the future viability, democracy, and worth of community bookmarking sites: how do you keep it fair, equal, and truly community moderated? The shmula article mentioned above discusses some interesting ideas to help level the playing-field and mitigate the powerful cult followings many of the Digg 100 have:
- To tackle Groupthink, make it truly democratic again — do not profile Top Diggers or elevate anybody higher than anyone else. This includes no special weights on previous digging history, etc. — level playing ground for everyone, no monarchies or philosopher-kings.
- To tackle the problem of conformity, do not show profile or # of votes for up-and-coming dugg articles. Just show the article link, with no profiles or votes attached to it. As a compromise, only show the profiles and votes on the articles that make the Digg front page, but make them un-diggable from the front page.
The concepts of equality, freedom, and open access of information and ideas on the Internet make it the indispensable and inspiring realm that it is. The incredible and continuous growth of web-based information and innovation has managed to outpace the ability of the established media to wrangle it. It is only by maintaining a cautious eye on ourselves and the web communities we participate in that we can stay ahead of the game and keep our collective head out of the lasso.
I know this was posted on the 11th but was it written before? There are some significant events that happened in the last week with Digg that are not mentioned. Here's a repeat of what I just posted on Fluxx's entry:
Basically, bloggers accused the top diggers of gaming digg. (note: you are also doing this) Kevin Rose announced they were changing the algorithm to prevent such behavior. The #1 digger 'resigned' in protest and most of the top 30 removed their avatars in protest. Kevin and Jay (CEO) have both since made comments to try to support the top users but it will hard IMO to return to how things were before. Originally only 3 of the top 12 diggers accepted the Netscape offer of $1,000/month but if the top diggers to not feel supported by the digg team or community they will leave. There are more ways to show appreciation for someone's work than money but people must feel appreciated.
See more on this issue as well as comments from P9 (the top user who left) here:
Digg Changes Algorithm; Top User Resigns https://www.omninerd.com/2006/09/12/news/913
Now, there are masses of diggers burying every story submitted by a top digger. I wonder if this will be addressed in Digg's new algorithm changes. A story should not be buried just because of who submitted it for the same reason it should not be promoted just because of who submitted it.
I am going to have to agree with both webconnoisseur that the "Digg 100" is not a new term (see here). I also have to agree with tom6a because the recent changes somewhat negate the relevancy of this article. This writer says "minority control exercised by the Digg 100 and similar phenomena need to be addressed". I believe that this has now been addressed and the reason for the recent shake up at Digg.
Good post, good tone of voice and good title. You succesfully made me want to comment on your topic as I see you have inspired others.
I really couldn't get through this. Sorry.
I can tell this applicant has great web knowledge and does a good job of bringing up some new ideas. However, I think it is dangerous to proclaim he/she dubbed the digg 100, as a quick search tells me otherwise. A better way to say it is "what I call the dig 100" or "like to call". Rather than stake your claim, I suggest laying it out there, then letting others pin a phrase to you over time.
As for the rest of the post, it seemed crafty, but I couldn't help but skim the posting as it was too long-winded for my taste.
Jojo - We must agree to disagree - the headline is actually quite apt. One needs perhaps more than a little background on Rupert Murdoch to 'get it', but I enjoy writers who assume the reader is knowledgable.
In any system, whether it be Digg, my old dorm or a WWII POW camp, leaders will emerge and people will stand out above the rest. I consider this very important to the community as a whole, since they are cultivated and bread from within. So while the Digg 100 are powerfull, they are a the whim of Digg and the site. What makes them powerful is the Digging from the rest of the Digg userbase, not necessarly their money or fame....which is what Murdoch uses.
I don´t read the whole entry. Why? Because the headline is stupid.
Hmmm, care to elaborate? Saying something is stupid without explaining why is...well...stupid.
Because that is for me a totally easy answer. I don´t have to read this entry to learn the answer to this question. Of course Rupert Murdoch is more powerful than the Top100 Diggers. And so the Top100 Diggers are not the new Rupert Murdoch.
He ever will be more powerful than this group. If you compare the reach of digg with the reach of his worldwide TV channels, newspapers and websites it is for me totally obvious that Digg (and so the Top100 Diggers) will never have so much power as Rupert Murdoch. How many laws and politicians did Digg influence? And how many influenced Rupert with his newspapers and tv channels? And now Rupert has realized the power of the internet and he will get his share in this game, too.
I thought this entry had the best title - made me want to read it first.
Same here. I read this one first because of the title. They all have good titles though.
I'd guess that as the world of UGC grows, so will the power of influencers in those fields. It's great that Digg is trying to become more democratic - certainly something I can get behind. But, I don't see a disconnect between the power of some users to have a great influence over the visible portions of the web and the user-generated phenomenon.
We, as users, will line up behind those who can produce the best signal to noise ratio - great blogs, sites, media, filters, etc. The people who run those outlets will then have the duty to serve us to the best of their abilities, whether that feeds from collective intelligence or editorial opinion.