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Imagine the article rewritten as "The Death of the Internet."

All the premises are the same, and largely true: there's no strong central control, it's basically run by volunteers who have conflicting interests, and there's some abhorrent stuff out there.

The conclusion, that it's a failed experiment, doesn't seem to follow.

Reddit may die someday. Could happen, aggregators die, but I don't think a scandal means it's at death's door.

Even though I disagree with the conclusion, especially its forcefulness, the article has a fantastic collection of links. The links would be a great first place to catch the journalistic zeitgeist.



Except that nobody's trying to operate "The Internet, Inc.", a centralized, for-profit business encompassing the whole of the network. That's what Reddit-the-company has been trying to do with Reddit-the-community, and it doesn't work very well.


Fair. And to that point, Digg's making money and Youtube is struggling.

Maybe all our success stories need another look...

[1] http://blog.digg.com/post/109580738071/digg-by-the-numbers-2... (well, "consistent revenue"... couldn't find precise financials since 2008 or so)

[2] http://www.wsj.com/articles/viewers-dont-add-up-to-profit-fo...




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