Kevin Rose, the founder of Digg, is rejoining the website full-time.
Mezzell said Digg banned thousands of accounts and deployed both internal tools and external solutions, but they weren’t enough.
He admitted that the votes and the comments on the website couldn’t be trusted due to the amount of bot activity it got.
While Digg has decided to significantly downsize its team, a small number of staff members has stayed to rebuild it completely.
He said it wasn’t enough to present Digg as an alternative to current social networks and community-based websites.
“What comes next needs to be genuinely different,” he added.
The CEO didn’t explain how Digg will reinvent itself, but he did announce that its founder, Kevin Rose, is joining the company full time.
Rose bought back Digg last year in partnership with Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian.
Back then, they said they had “a fresh vision to restore the spirit of discovery and genuine community that made the early web a fun and exciting place to be.” Based on what happened to Digg, that’s now harder to achieve with the state of the internet today.
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Source: This article was originally published by Engadget
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