infinix x yugatech

AOL’s new Netscape is a Digg-killer?

Listen to article

The beta version of the new Netscape portal really looks like another Digg-clone. Techcrunch calls it “the massive digg-killer” noting that Netscape serves a whopping 811 million monthly page views – far more than Digg today. With that amount of existing traffic, Jason Calacanis (the head huncho for WeblogsINC and Netscape), is pretty excited that they could build something great with the so-called meta-journalism (or social journalism).

The main difference between the new Netscape and Digg is that the latter is 100% pure user-driven while Calacanis’ new one will have editors or moderators. This means that the news that gets on top of the frontpage are then followed-up by the paid meta-journalists by way of verification, interviews and further research. Basically, the users themselves will be the ones nominating which stories should be covered more.

Digg CEO Jay Adelson responds to Netscape challenge:

Finally, we are very proud of the fact that there have been thousands of clones of digg. Keep them coming! (Time Warner is the first billion dollar company to do it, but bring it on. Surprised they went for the look and feel too, though.)

Oh wait, any new social news and bookmarking site now becomes a clone of Digg? Besides, was Digg ever an original idea? Digg was just a mix and match of the best features of del.icio.us and Slashdot. At least at Netscape, any attack/criticism on their site still gets the frontpage. Last time I heard, any submissions to Digg that’s anti-Digg are buried to oblivion.

I like Digg, don’t get me wrong, but if the owners talk as if their ideas are original and any other group or individual trying to improve it by either cloning or innovating on the idea are just a mess isn’t a nice way to welcome a new player.

[tags]netscape, digg, newsvine, reddit, delicious, social bookmarking[/tags]

React to this article:
Written by
Abe Olandres

Abe Olandres

Editor-in-chief

Abe is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of YugaTech with over 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is one of the pioneers of blogging in the country and is considered by many as the Father of Tech Blogging in the Philippines.

View all posts by Abe Olandres →

4 Comments

AB
Abe Olandres Editor-in-chief · 20 years ago

@ luis

Yup, you will notice in the TWiT that Kevin Rose was avoiding Leo’s question about why “FG was banned” (along with other Digg users) for trying to explain the “conspiracy theory”. Buried was normal considering the huge army of anti anti-Digg. But the banning was another thing.


Reply
FL
Fleeb · 20 years ago
Reply
LU
luis · 20 years ago

and although he may be mistaken that there are thousands of digg clones, i’m pretty sure there are at least a hundred or so: http://shii.org/tech/digg


Reply
LU
luis · 20 years ago

the forevergeek.com incident was debunked and explained; i can’t believe people are still talking about that like it was some kind of scandal or something. they were spam-posting their own stories — OBVIOUSLY they’d get buried. (http://twit.tv/twit51)

and i don’t think adelson was saying that every social news site was a digg clone; it’s just that I doubt there’s a single user on this planet that’d look at the netscape design and NOT think digg … the derivation is so obvious.


Reply

Leave a Reply

Loading next article...