Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Like it or lump it, the major reason that determines whether any given online story will get read or not is how much play it gets on news link sharing sites and social networks like Digg, reddit, and StumbleUpon. Unlike earlier news sharing sites like Slashdot, these sites have no central editorial control. Instead, the stories that get prominent play on these sites is determined entirely by readers. That sounds like democracy in its most basic form, but in practice what it really means that stories can be buried from sight by abusive users with an ax to grind. I became aware of this because in the last few weeks I've had several stories that were pro-Linux and anti-Microsoft-Linux, it doesn't get any faster and Macs, Windows 7, and Linux--first became popular on Digg, and, an hour later they were buried."
Posted Jun 25, 2009 20:31 UTC (Thu)
by roskegg (subscriber, #105)
[Link] (10 responses)
Posted Jun 25, 2009 21:53 UTC (Thu)
by ncm (guest, #165)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Jun 25, 2009 22:20 UTC (Thu)
by dmarti (subscriber, #11625)
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Posted Jun 25, 2009 22:12 UTC (Thu)
by alankila (guest, #47141)
[Link] (2 responses)
My prediction is that you will see nothing out of ordinary. I find it hard to believe in this conspiracy that you speak of, but a little bit of detective work in form of hard data could change my mind.
Posted Jun 26, 2009 8:55 UTC (Fri)
by mjthayer (guest, #39183)
[Link]
Posted Jun 29, 2009 18:06 UTC (Mon)
by BrucePerens (guest, #2510)
[Link]
It is a standard feature these days that PR agencies help you with social networking. It's probably the majority of their business for many of them. That means digg, wikipedia, slashdot, etc.
Posted Jun 29, 2009 17:47 UTC (Mon)
by BrucePerens (guest, #2510)
[Link] (4 responses)
We need to do it too. Unfortunately.
Posted Jun 29, 2009 18:14 UTC (Mon)
by hppnq (guest, #14462)
[Link] (3 responses)
+1 hilarious
Posted Jun 29, 2009 20:43 UTC (Mon)
by BrucePerens (guest, #2510)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Jun 29, 2009 21:20 UTC (Mon)
by jordanb (guest, #45668)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Jun 29, 2009 22:19 UTC (Mon)
by BrucePerens (guest, #2510)
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Posted Jun 25, 2009 21:22 UTC (Thu)
by jmorris42 (guest, #2203)
[Link] (16 responses)
It doesn't just sound like democracy in its most basic form, it IS democracy in action. The problem is we have been conditioned by the media and the government schools to view democracy as an unquestionable good thing. It isn't. The US Founding Fathers understood this and carefully designed us a Republic instead. The pros and cons of pure democracy were well understood and considered terrifying. See the French Revolution for examples of the horrors they foresaw and designed out of the US Constitution.
The problem is the sites are based on pure democracy and thus there is no technical fix possible. Only by admitting the problem can the design be corrected. Keep this in mind when people push democracy as the solution to other problems both online and in meatspace.
On the other hand, as the original article notes, sites like Slashdot have held up fairly well even with massive growth. Still a pretty popular site with thousands of active users at any point in time, fairly simple moderation system. But not a pure democracy and there are clearly editors in the decision loop to keep the S/N ratio usable.
Imagine an open source project with a totally open repo where anyone could commit patches. Would anyone expect anything useful to come from such a project?
Posted Jun 25, 2009 21:41 UTC (Thu)
by jordanb (guest, #45668)
[Link] (9 responses)
Posted Jun 25, 2009 21:57 UTC (Thu)
by ncm (guest, #165)
[Link] (7 responses)
Posted Jun 25, 2009 22:10 UTC (Thu)
by Ed_L. (guest, #24287)
[Link] (5 responses)
Posted Jun 25, 2009 23:38 UTC (Thu)
by ncm (guest, #165)
[Link] (4 responses)
Posted Jun 27, 2009 4:15 UTC (Sat)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (3 responses)
You never were taught early democratic history have you? The greeks were the first ones to identify the weaknesses inherent in democracy.
And the biggest weakness is, indeed, it all starts falling appart when the regular folk realize that they can vote themselves raises and are swayed by skillfull polititions who promise to fullfill those desires.
The other major weakness, is of course, a fully democratic nation is easily directed by mass histeria.. that is a country will typically go huge, rather temporary, swings in political opinion that has more to do with emotion then reason. For example: 9/11 or the stock market crash. Then again, skillfull polititions can leverage this temporary lack of reason to rush through laws and garner more power in a short time.
Thats why the USA (with the longest lasting democracy so far) was originally designed with a very weak and ineffectual central government. The designers wanted to have a way to counter the negative effects of democracy and prop up the positive effects. The way it's designed with a 3 branch system is designed to slow things down and make it hard for people to rush through legislation and pass laws.
After 200 years or so those limitations have, unfortunately, been largely forgotten and in the past 30 years people have been happy to give huge amounts of power to the central government for all sorts of lets-get-boogyman-now-before-they-get-us reasons. (economic paranioa, terrorism, war on drugs, environmentalism scare tactics, religous wackiness, its-for-the-children, etc etc)
Posted Jun 27, 2009 4:18 UTC (Sat)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link]
The 'elites' get their power by promising people those 'plebs' "bread and circuses".
Corporate power is one way, but it's much more limited then the power people obtain through holding high government office. The sort of the people that get the high corporate power and the same sort of people that get high governmental power. Same types, same ambitions.
Posted Jun 27, 2009 13:20 UTC (Sat)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link]
I suspect the case of the English Parliament makes it very hard to say
what the age of the 'oldest continuous democracy' is, because its
democracy was not designed but emerged over a very long period of time.
Parliament could perhaps be considered to date back to the witenagemot,
which vanishes into the mists of history but has written evidence
surviving from the 600s, and was probably an old insitution then. I'm
fairly sure that's older than the US, but I'm also fairly sure it wasn't
what we'd today call a democracy. When did democracy in England start?
Probably sometime in the 12th to 15th centuries, but there wasn't one
moment you could point at and say 'here begins democracy', and so you
can't say whether England (or its descendant states) or some other nation
wins this contest (though it would probably be unfair to disqualify
England merely because of temporary disruptions like Cromwell, or on the
basis that the Act of Union saw it replaced with the UK Parliament, a body
with a similar name, membership, and traditions sitting in the same
building). Sorry if this torpedoes your quest for an unambiguous 'oldest'
to point to.
Posted Jun 28, 2009 20:19 UTC (Sun)
by job (guest, #670)
[Link]
I hope you are joking. How long have you even had equal rights and votes for all in the US? It wasn't even early by international standards. But democracy in the western sense is a fairly recent invention. It took even longer for all to get the chance for education etc. to actually make use of it. If all that is required is that some people get to vote, democracy in many countries predate even the founding of USA by at least a couple of hundred years. A modern democracy also requires that more than a few owners control media (fail), that media is not censored (fail) and that the juridical system works with medieval measures such as capital punishment (if the US was a European state this alone would be considered too undemocratic to join the EU). There are many democratic predictor values that can be used in the political sciences. How different nation states scores at different periods in history makes for some interesting reading.
Posted Jun 25, 2009 22:34 UTC (Thu)
by nybble41 (subscriber, #55106)
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Posted Jun 26, 2009 11:31 UTC (Fri)
by rvfh (guest, #31018)
[Link]
Of course, consensus other millions of people might get a bit difficult to reach, so we use voting systems instead...
Posted Jun 25, 2009 21:58 UTC (Thu)
by proski (subscriber, #104)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Jun 26, 2009 1:12 UTC (Fri)
by gdt (subscriber, #6284)
[Link]
An important aspect of democracy is the election -- where everyone votes roughly simultaneously -- which limits gamesmanship, including that described in the article. Digg is an ongoing popularity poll, not a democracy.
Posted Jun 26, 2009 9:59 UTC (Fri)
by dmk (guest, #50141)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Jun 29, 2009 8:53 UTC (Mon)
by Seegras (guest, #20463)
[Link]
We've got a lot of the same problems as the USA; tough generally in lesser extent, since we've got some more safeguards built in. (Like: A ruling council of 7 people which serves also as cabinet, instead of a president who can choose his own cronies as cabinet).
Posted Jul 2, 2009 11:19 UTC (Thu)
by nim-nim (subscriber, #34454)
[Link] (1 responses)
Not that dead horse again
It is massively dishonest to compare early years of the French and US republics and state the differences were caused by their respective constitutions. The French republic had to contend with multiple hostile vultures (neighbours) all too happy to intervene military, profit from the political upheaval, and settle centuries-old scores (aggravated by European nobility cross-continent alliances and intervention by religious authorities). And in case that was not sufficient, don't forget the revolution started in the first place because people were starved after several years of bad harvests combined with economic crash.
The USA OTOH had help from every English enemy and was an ocean away from its main opponent anyway.
In other circumstances there would have been little blood-letting in France. The king was even unharmed and left in place at first, it took his fleeing abroad (with the intention to return at the head of a foreign army) to radicalise the country.
The same repeated foreign interventions, religious meddling and nobility plotting caused years of bloody religious wars in France a few centuries before, with no revolution involved. It was endemic in Italy for a long time.
So don't get fooled by the anti-Napoleonic propaganda that lingers in the anglo-saxon world. The horrors that occurred in Europe at the end of the 18th century had little to do with political systems and can be explained 120% by the usual clashes between powers with too much influence/wealth/armament/ambition and too little sense.
Posted Jul 10, 2009 12:22 UTC (Fri)
by gvy (guest, #11981)
[Link]
DISCLAIMER: I have a few close friends among Jews but none of them do Judaism, so please spare "antisemite" labels. :)
Posted Jun 25, 2009 21:36 UTC (Thu)
by shieldsd (guest, #20198)
[Link]
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."
Posted Jun 26, 2009 6:22 UTC (Fri)
by kmike (guest, #5260)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Jun 27, 2009 14:40 UTC (Sat)
by man_ls (guest, #15091)
[Link]
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Conspiracies
So Digg users don't overlap much with Linux fanboys. Alexa toolbar users and Slashdot readers don't overlap much either. And Ted Nugent stories probably don't do too well on the vegan sites. Welcome to the fragmented echo chamber media of the future.
Overlap
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
I can give you one data point. When I worked for Sourcelabs, we had messages to the staff email alias asking for diggs, when there was a story about the company. The emails were probably innocent in nature, but IMO companies should not do that. IMO they all do.Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
This is a perfectly legal although ethically shady business function offered by public relations agencies. They have people in India, etc., and robots, that vote on sites like Digg. They do it on Slashdot too. And wikipedia.Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
We need to do it too. Unfortunately.
Thank you for your content-free posting. How about suggesting another approach, then? And before you say it's not happening, read this.
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Not alone. But combine it with other social media, and you get the death of a thousand cuts.
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
"The downfall of a democracy occurs when the plebs, discovering they can vote themselves bread and circuses, vote themselves bread and circuses." -- Robert A. Heinlein.
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
Thats why the USA (with the longest lasting democracy so far)
That is extremely debatable (and this is completely off topic but it's
Saturday and I'm bored). For the first fifty-plus years the franchise was
decidedly limited, so it's questionable to what extent it was more a
democracy than, say, Britain, which banned slavery on its shores earlier
but had rotten boroughs and very strange voter eligibility criteria to
contend with.
The flaw is inherent in the design
Thats why the USA (with the longest lasting democracy so far)
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
Analogies between Digg and democracy are flawed
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
The flaw is inherent in the design
> Republic instead. The pros and cons of pure democracy were well understood
> and considered terrifying. See the French Revolution for examples of the
> horrors they foresaw and designed out of the US Constitution.
re FR
> with too much influence/wealth/armament/ambition and too little sense.
In case of French Revolution those were Jews; in case of Russian one those had little mason drones to proxy themselves with.
R. P. Feynman on Technology
Digg, Dug, Buried: How Linux news disappears (ComputerWorld)
Yes, this is a much simpler explanation and which Vaughan-Nichols fails to acknowledge: maybe some people are just fed up of Linux-related news and want to see something different.
Overlooked premise
