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Digg's Kevin Rose: We've Got to Be More Relevant
There remains a huge gap between Web 2.0 theory and Web 2.0 practice: User-generated content sites, rather than having an even vaguely homogenous user base in terms of contribution, remain divided between an anonymous/reader-only majority and a vocal, post-happy minority. Sort of like audience members and performers.
How do you get the silent masses to join those with little user pics? That's the bajillion-dollar question.
Digg co-founder Kevin Rose addressed this during the Future of Web Apps Expo today in London.
"We have to do better," he said in his talk, called "The Future of News," and said that it's time for the social news site that he founded in 2004 to to expand beyond the geek set and get some real-world relevance. "Why click a button and make the number go up by one? Why does that matter?"
Digg, after all, gets more than 30 million monthly visitors, but Rose said that the site only has slightly over three million registered user accounts--those are the people actually "Digging."
Still, the challenge is clear: bringing one's site's value to the non-digerati.
October 9, 2008 at 09:01 am by jordan, 184 views, 2 comments
Crowd Power
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bowbrick
Radlett, HRT, -
TechnologyBB
Gent, BEVLG, Belgium -
2nk
Aruba -
Jenaelee
Columbus, Ohio, United States -
Florian SEROUSSI
North Miami Beach, Florida, United States -
tinromedia
Boston, United States -
NJNL
San Jose, California, United States -
chadspacey
Sunnyvale, California, United States -
julianasur
San Jose, California, United States







Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 13:04 on October 11th, 2008
jordan, I like this story. It's good stuff.
It's a good question - how to increase engagement as well as readership. Is the problem figuring out who you're trying to be "relevant" to? Grabbing hardcore netziens is a lot easier than grabbing the casual browser.
at 08:39 on October 17th, 2008
Digg's Kevin Rose at last month's TechCrunch50 in San Francisco, digging Cyber Sapiens - a documentary exploring social media in the Internet age.
tinromedia has contributed a photo to this story.