Back to Digg HomeDigg is a place to discover and share the best content from across the web.

What is Digg?

Digg is a place for people to discover and share content from anywhere on the web. From the biggest online destinations to the most obscure blog, Digg surfaces the best stuff as voted on by our users. You won’t find editors at Digg — we’re here to provide a place where people can collectively determine the value of content and we’re changing the way people consume information online.

How do we do this? Everything on Digg — from news to videos to images — is submitted by our community (that would be you). Once something is submitted, other people see it and Digg what they like best. If your submission rocks and receives enough Diggs, it is promoted to the front page for the millions of our visitors to see.

And it doesn’t stop there. Because Digg is all about sharing and discovery, there’s a conversation that happens around the content. We’re here to promote that conversation and provide tools for our community to discuss the topics that they’re passionate about. By looking at information through the lens of the collective community on Digg, you’ll always find something interesting and unique. We’re committed to giving every piece of content on the web an equal shot at being the next big thing.

Recently on the Blog

Best of Digg: June Comments

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In addition to presenting the most talked-about news of the day, Digg allows users to discover and comment on the sometimes beautiful and sometimes ridiculous images that fly across the web.

Digg4 is Alpha. Really Alpha. Don't worry, we got this.

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Last night we invited in our biggest batch of V4 alpha users at around 6pm. 20,000 in total. Within 20 minutes, Digg V4 was unusable. Here's what happened:

Tom Conrad - Navigating the Smartphone Seas

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Interested in why Tom Conrad, the CTO of the Pandora music recommendation service, said “I need Android like I need a hole in the head”? He stopped by the Digg office last week as part of the Engineer-to-Engineer: San Francisco Tech Talks to talk about how a focus on mobile applications helped transform Pandora into the enormously popular service that many of us know and love.