AI NewsDigg tries again, this time as an AI news aggregator
Digg tries again, this time as an AI news aggregator
10:38 PM IST · May 11, 2026

Digg is back from the dead. Again. Just months afterlaunching, therebootof Kevin Roseâs once-popular link-sharing siteshut down in March, as the company shifted course. Originally redesigned as acompetitorto the massive community forum site Reddit, the new Digg found that it wasnât able to effectively manage the bot traffic invading its platform and hadnât differentiated itself enough from the competition to make an impact. The startup laid off staff and said it was time to go back to the drawing board. Rose, a partner at True Ventures, returned to work full-time on a new version of Digg in April. On Friday evening, the founderprevieweda link to the newly redesignedDigg, which now looks nothing like a Reddit clone and more like the news aggregator it once was. a little project i've been hacking on:https://t.co/zTuwWy44lybugs expected. more topics soon. This time around, the site is focused on ranking news â specifically, AI news to start. In an email to beta testers, the company said the siteâs goal is to âtrack the most influential voices in a spaceâ and to surface the news thatâs actually worth âpaying attention to.â AI is the area itâs testing this idea with, but if successful, Digg will expand to include other topics. The email warned that the site was still raw and âbuggy,â and was designed more to give users a first look than to serve as its public debut. On the current homepage, Digg showcases four main stories at the top: the most viewed story, a story seeing rising discussion, the fastest-climbing story, and one âIn case you missed itâ headline. Below that is a ranked list of top stories for the day, complete with engagement metrics like views, comments, likes, and saves. But the twist is that these metrics arenât the ones generated on Digg itself. Instead, Digg is ingesting content from X in real-time to determine whatâs being discussed, while also performing sentiment analysis, clustering, and signal detection to determine what matters most. As Roseremarked on X,when OpenAI CEO Sam Altman engages with a story about AI, it almost always sets off a chain reaction that includes deep discussion and propagation of that topic throughout X. The new Digg will be able to track that increased engagement. This might be something thatâs interesting to data nerds, as it exposes the impact of X-based engagement with charts and graphs, and offers a way to track signal among what can, on X, often be a lot of noise. But itâs unclear whether thereâs enough underlying value here for an everyday user, beyond seeing that yes, a@samatweet can make something go viral. The site also ranks the top 1,000 people involved in AI, as well as the top companies and the top politicians focused on AI issues. For those who donât have time to spend on X tracking breaking AI news, Digg could prove a useful resource. But itâs not clear why people would regularly turn to Digg over their preferred news app, RSS reader, or even their X âFor Youâ feed, if they wanted to catch up on whatâs trending â especially because there isnât currently any discussion happening on Diggâs site itself. Digg may also struggle when it moves on to other topics, as AI news is one of the few areas where discussion still heavily takes place on X. Other verticals donât have the same traction, especially after Muskâs takeover of the site formerly known as Twitter gave rise to an ecosystem of competitors, which now includes Metaâs creator-focused Threads. Many non-tech-related discussions are now happening off X, or off the public internet entirely. However, if Digg does end up gaining steam, it could serve as a useful source of website traffic to publishers whose businesses have been decimated bydeclining clicksthanks to Googleâs changing algorithms andthe impact of AI Overviews, the AI-generated summaries Google displays atop search results, which often answer usersâ questions before they ever click through to a website.
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