Five Reasons FriendFeed Is Better Than Digg
Tech : Duncan Riley
Posted: June 12, 2008

Kevin Rose’s Digg may be the golden child of the social sharing space, but it’s FriendFeed that is getting all the attention lately. I’ve always enjoyed Digg (and Kevin Rose is a good bloke as well which helps) but today I find FriendFeed superior for what it delivers to me, even if the traffic it might deliver back to this blog isn’t one tenth of what Digg provides.

Here’s my top five reasons that FriendFeed is better than Digg.

1. FriendFeed is Personal

FriendFeed delivers interesting things from people I know or trust, whereas Digg delivers seemingly random value that doesn’t always fit my likes. Even getting down to subsections on Digg doesn’t satisfy me any more. It use to have a terrible tech bias to anything to do with Linux, but today the tech news doesn’t have much depth at all

2. FriendFeed can be filtered

Let’s presume that I don’t like some of the content I’m seeing in FriendFeed, I can block that content from appearing, in Digg it’s a case of all or nothing

3. FriendFeed is Egalitarian, Digg is elitist

On FriendFeed I discover new things from interesting people no matter how popular their overall standing, on Digg getting to the front page is often who you know and favors popular sites (ie: getting dugg by a top digger makes a world of difference to your chances of hitting the front page). FriendFeed isn’t the perfect level playing field (people have to follow you to give you that initial leg up), but it’s a lot more level than Digg.

4. Digg is slow, FriendFeed is fast

If you want to find up-to-date or even breaking news, don’t visit Digg. The Digg voting system makes it even slower now for great stories to hit the front page (over 150 votes sometimes). On FriendFeed major news immediately appears in my stream and if it’s important news it will often stay there as more and more people like it or comment on it.

5. FriendFeed hasn’t been gamed…well at least yet

Vote swapping and social manipulation are rife on Digg, but on FriendFeed this is heavily restricted because you only see the content voted upon by your friends, or as the case may be their content with votes from others. This isn’t to say that eventually someone won’t try and game FriendFeed, but a bit like Twitter before it the ability to quickly block content (in part or full, and with variations there in) gives FriendFeed users the ability to punish those who do the wrong thing. Digg on the other hands rewards those who game the system, and don’t for one minute think that it isn’t currently being gamed in a big way.

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  • June 12, 2008 at 11:44 pm Mark Forman
    only 5 reasons-how about less retards here...
  • June 12, 2008 at 11:46 pm Duncan Riley
    Mark lol :-)
  • June 12, 2008 at 11:49 pm Chris Baskind
    I value Digg. But Digg is push; FF is pull. Which is truly the Web 2.0 application?
  • June 12, 2008 at 11:52 pm Frederic
    I also appreciate the egalitarian aspect of FF - no rankings, no voting (except for the likes - which help, but are based on content, no matter where it comes from) - and there is still a real feeling of community
  • June 13, 2008 at 12:07 am BCK
    and no MrBabyMan, but in all reality Friendfeed is basically all stuff I like, with Digg I gotta sort though a pile of junk to find a handful of articles I like
  • June 13, 2008 at 12:21 am Orli Yakuel
    #3 is part of the social evolution. Eventually, we won't use services like digg, reddit, etc,. as much as before, not just because we won't have time :-) it's mainly because everyone can have the same "user power" when they submitting stuff to Twitter, Friendfeed etc,.
  • June 13, 2008 at 1:11 am El-Hassan Wanas
    should I comment on this or the digg post, hmmm
  • June 13, 2008 at 4:53 am Soulhuntre
    It isnt overun but 11 people boosting the same political / copyright "news" to the front page every 3 minutes?
  • June 13, 2008 at 5:00 am Noah David Simon
    I'm getting annoyed with half the conversation on friendfeed dealing with which social network is better. friendfeed is the best interface, but it is bad that there is nothing but a bunch of dorks here. IMHO MySpace and facebook has the best people... too bad the administration is fascist and the interface stupid. digg links to friendfeed. I don't have a problem with it beyond the fact that it is hard to use
  • June 13, 2008 at 5:03 am ben barren
    @ndsimon totally agree ive hidden as many meta-high-noise users as possible but its hard to avoid. the main issue is that comments should be hidden by default and can be opened by clicking on. as it is they take up too much realestate and also keep old items at the top if they have comments which intermittently get added thus adding the item to the top again which shouldnt happen either.
  • June 13, 2008 at 5:52 am Ryan
    If users are finding some streams on FF too noisy, shouldn't they just stop following the user instead of constantly hiding their posts? You can't filter Digg's front page in the same way.
  • June 13, 2008 at 8:07 am Jason Goldberg
    FF is a web 2.0 chat room. It def appeals to the tech first mover crowd as previously there was no good way for us geeks to have constructive conversations at any moment on any topic. Previously we would have had to participate out in the open with the Diggers or one blog at a time.
  • June 13, 2008 at 9:21 am Jeremy Hall
    I am still hoping to seem some improvements in sorting/organizing the FF view to be easier to scan at-a-glance, but I definitely like it much better than Digg.
  • June 13, 2008 at 10:37 am Alex Hammer
    Go Duncan! Friendfeed starting to hit that sweet spot.
  • June 13, 2008 at 3:09 pm Jeremy Kunz
    Agreed!
  • June 13, 2008 at 5:10 pm Rahsheen Porter
    I Digg stuff that people ask me to Digg that is actually good content. I never visit the site otherwise because my introduction to it showed me that it was just a bunch of elitist crap. My friends and associates should take action to promote my content based on the fact that it's awesome, not cuz I asked them to.
  • June 13, 2008 at 5:17 pm J. Phil
    @chris - push is not web 2.0. Remember Pointcast? Total web .5 push tech.
  • June 13, 2008 at 5:21 pm Abby Martin
    Wouldn't that be fewer retards? (Said the grammar retard?)
  • June 13, 2008 at 7:40 pm Mike Fruchter
    Excellent post Duncan, you are spot on. I don't even visit Digg anymore. Occasionally i will pull up there feed in G Reader, compare that to the countless hours i spend and devote on Friendfeed. The clear winner is FF on all fronts.
  • June 13, 2008 at 9:09 pm Leo Laporte
    The Wisdom of the Crowds depends a lot on who's in the crowd.
  • June 13, 2008 at 11:20 pm Noah David Simon
    da--eeeeh retaaaahds

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