“I forgot that I hate Digg, so I submitted my iPod Classic article and it accidentally got frontpaged.
I’d like to thank Digg’s readers for:
- flooding the Digg page with crappy comments
- flooding my site with crappy comments
- making fun of my site when it went down for about 35 seconds
- judging the article without reading it
- judging my site without reading it
- not clicking ads, ruining my CTR average
- blocking ads, so I don’t even get CPM
- not subscribing to RSS
- never returning (this is probably a good thing)
I don’t know why web publishers try so hard to get this useless audience to mob their sites.”
This is From Marco’s Tumblr, I agree with him almost 100% (it’s not fair to complain about then not clicking your ads or not subscribing, you should click ads if you are interested in them, and subscribe if you like what you see). I love Digg, I love the site, I love the people who make the site, and I like a lot of the stories I see on the site, I just hate most of the community, I think 1 of two things show happen on Digg: either only allow people who have at least submitted 1 story (preferably one that got on the front page or got a certain number of diggs) or give me a button that hides all douche bag comments, I’m sure there is some kind of algorithm for that.