Digg isn’t the first social media site to fall. MySpace collapsed under their own weight. Other social news sites like Propeller, Yahoo Buzz, and Mixx never got the traction they needed. Facebook pushed out a lot of would-be social networks over the years. When Betaworks bought Digg for a ridiculously-low amount, it didn’t mark the first failure of a social media giant.
It was just the first time a social media giant fell for no apparent reason.
Digg had the traffic. It had the buzz. It had the personality. It made one major misstep with the roll out of V4, but otherwise their faults were not any bigger than any other social site (and arguably smaller than successful sites like Facebook, Twitter, and Reddit). Now, it has nothing but a shadow of its former self and new bosses to take them towards a new direction on August 1. This infographic breaks down the Digg demise and points to similarities that may show Digg to be the tip of the social media failure iceberg.
Source: EasyFinance.com
Is Digg a harbinger in social media?

Disclosure: Some of the links in this article are affiliate links and we may earn a small commission if you make a purchase, which helps us to keep delivering quality content to you. Here is our disclosure policy.
Similar Stories
On March 14, Elon Musk expanded his list of acquisitions by adding another start-up company, Hotshot, an AI video-generating tool,...
OpenAI is starting beta testing of ChatGPT Connectors for Google Drive and Slack. Tibor Blaho shared the information on Monday, 17...
Kim Albarella, Head of TikTok Global Security announced that the short-form mobile video app is introducing a key tool of...