Digg has unexpectedly closed again, just two months after relaunching its social bookmarking news aggregator. This shutdown follows severe issues with SEO spam and fake engagement, which surfaced immediately after the platform's beta opened. According to the Digg team, posts from SEO spammers took advantage of Digg's remaining Google link authority. In response, the team banned tens of thousands of accounts and implemented both internal tools and third-party vendor solutions, but these measures failed to resolve the core problems. As the team explained, the inability to trust votes, comments, and other engagement undermined the foundation of the community platform. Following this setback, Digg has significantly downsized its team to adapt to the challenges and focus efforts. The group has stated intentions to rebuild Digg with a smaller staff and an entirely new approach, emphasizing that any new version must be genuinely different to restore trust and value. Notably, Kevin Rose, Digg'...
Related
xAI has open-sourced Grok Build after backlash over secretly uploading users’ repositories
xAI has released the full source code of Grok Build, its AI coding agent, after Cereblab researchers found that the tool was uploading users’ entire Git repositories to company con...
Hack revealed AI music platform Suno scraped millions of songs from YouTube, Deezer & more
Apparently, the popular AI music platform Suno was hacked in November 2025 through a supply chain attack that exposed an employee’s credentials, according to a report from 404 Medi...
Forgejo 16.0 adds SSRF protection, granular notifications, and refined review tools
Forgejo v16.0 has been launched with security, workflow, and collaboration improvements for the self hosted code platform. Git mirrors now have stronger protection against server s...