The social news site Digg found itself criticized earlier this year after the release of the DiggBar and Digg short URLs, which some said “stole” traffic and pagerank from publisher sites to increase Digg’s pageviews. Now Digg faces a new accusation: that it has, either accidentally or on purpose, changed the behavior of these URLs to send logged-out users to Digg.com in preference to the publisher sites . We were able to verify that Digg is indeed redirecting Digg URLs to its own site. DiggBar Controversy First, a little background. At launch, Digg URLs provided an alternative to popular URL shorteners like bit.ly and TinyURL (commonly used to save characters on Twitter), except that the links loaded publisher sites in framed pages on Digg.com. Some claimed that this was a way to build traffic to Digg while hurting the search engine traffic provided to publishers. After a firestorm in the SEO community that lead to some sites adding “framebreakers” to prevent Digg framing their sites, Digg relented and decided to only frame pages if the user was logged in to Digg at the time. New Digg URL Behavior: Redirects Traffic to Digg.com This week Digg users have noticed an odd change in the way Digg URLs work: for logged out users, they no longer go to the site they link to. Instead, the links go to the Digg.com page

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Digg Accused of Twitter Traffic Bait and Switch



Gregory


