About Digg

  • What is Digg?
  • Digg is a place for people to discover and share content found on the web. From the biggest online destination to the most obscure blog, Digg surfaces the best stuff as voted on by our users. You won’t find editors at Digg — we’re here to provide a place where people collectively determine the value of content. In doing so, we’re changing the way people consume information online.

  • How do I report a bug, problem or abuse?
  • If you encounter a bug, abusive behavior or other problem on the site, please use our Contact page to let us know what’s happening — Digg’s support team is available to make sure the community’s concerns are heard and responded to quickly.

  • What’s the best way to find interesting stuff?
  • Digg is organized into groups of categories based on topics. First, go to the homepage, where you’ll find the best of the best according to the Digg community. From there, click around on some of the topics listed at the top (Technology, World & Business, etc.) and you’ll see the top stories in each individual category.

    If you’re more of the get in early type, check out our expansive Upcoming section for stories that haven’t been promoted yet. You can also sort content by News, Images, and Videos.

  • How do you determine what is displayed in My News?
  • My News is selected based upon the people you choose to follow, the stories you like to read (Dugg or commented on by Digg users you follow), and the stories that are trending across the entire Digg community.

  • What is My News?
  • My News is one of the new features we’re most excited about in the new Digg. This is where you can get a personalized news experience filtered by your friends, the people you like, and the sources you trust for content. One of the reasons we created My News is because we found that how relevant or interesting an article is to you is directly related to how much you trust where it came from. News means different things to different people, but generally articles are interesting because the story was recommended by your friend, came from a blogger you really like, or a source you really trust.

  • What is Top News?
  • If you want the “classic” Digg experience, Top News is the Digg you know and love. This is the global zeitgeist of popular content on the web as voted by the Digg community. While My News can deliver trusted news from mainstream and small publishers alike, Top News will still highlight the spirit of the Digg community.

  • What is Newswire and where is the Upcoming section?
  • The Upcoming section from Digg has been replaced with the new-and-improved Newswire. It allows you to sort/filter content based on different bits of criteria. Here, you can find new submissions and sort them based on topic, media type, and minimum/maximum number of Diggs. Newswire also features a sidebar displaying, in real-time, current Digger activity. This allows you to see Diggers like yourself Digging and burying stories as it happens!

    For a more detailed look at Newswire, check out our blog post at:
    http://about.digg.com/blog/sifting-for-diamonds-with-the-digg-newswire

Accounts

Content: submissions, Diggs, buries and comments

Digging, Burying and Promotion

  • How many Diggs or buries does it take to promote or remove a story?
  • It depends. The promotion or burying of stories is managed by an algorithm developed by Digg, and there is no specific threshold of Diggs or buries required to promote or bury a story. Instead, our algorithm takes several factors into consideration, including (but not limited to) the number and diversity of Diggs, buries,the time the story was submitted and the topic.

  • There are stories with hundreds of Diggs — why haven’t they been promoted?
  • Our algorithm takes several factors into consideration, including (but not limited to) the number and diversity of Diggs, user reports, the time the story was submitted and the topic. Though we cannot go into further detail about the algorithm, we can say that one of the keys to promotion is the element of diversity, as mentioned above. Without diversity, a story will not be promoted. This is to help ensure promotable content will be interesting to the wide spectrum of users that follow our Top News page and not just the same ring of users who Digg up content.

  • Why don’t you show who buried a story?
  • Simple: We like to focus on the positive and don’t want to spark sandbox fights between users. What you bury is your own personal decision, and our math takes care of deciding when a story will be buried.

Profiles

Ads

  • What are DiggAds?
  • DiggAds is a new advertising platform that provides an interactive advertising experience for the user; you can Digg the ads you like and bury those you don't. Through your participation, successful ads will be shown more often and unsuccessful ads will get voted out of rotation. DiggAds function separately from user submitted Digg content.

  • Why would I Digg or bury an ad?
  • The goal of Digg Ads is to encourage advertisers to create content that is as interesting as organic Digg content. By Digging or burying the Digg Ads, you are helping us determine which ads to show to more people, and which ads to show less frequently.

    Digging or burying Digg Ads helps us continue to improve the overall Digg experience. We give each advertiser a content score based in part on the community’s Diggs and buries. Advertisers with higher content scores will pay less and their ads will be shown to more people. Also, when you bury an ad you won’t see the ad again (as long as you’re logged in).

More Digg Info