Digg is one of the more interesting tech stories in recent times. The site launched as a Reddit rival in January 2026, shut down just two months later after getting overrun by bots, and has now returned as something completely different.
Founder Kevin Rose showcased the redesigned Digg last Friday, and the new site looks nothing like its previous version. It’s not a Reddit competitor anymore. It’s an AI news aggregator.
So what does the new Digg actually do?
The site tracks and ranks AI news by monitoring real-time engagement on X. Instead of relying on votes or comments on Digg itself, the site ingests content from X and runs sentiment analysis, signal detection, and clustering to figure out what stories actually matter.
The homepage highlights trending stories. Below that is a ranked list of the day’s top stories with engagement metrics. The site also ranks the top 1,000 people in AI, the top companies, and politicians focused on AI issues.
Clicking into a story opens a dedicated page that goes well beyond just the headline. At the top, you get a short AI-generated summary of the story so you can quickly understand what’s happening without clicking through to the original source.
Below that is the original post that sparked the conversation, followed by a full feed of quotes, replies, and reposts from people who engaged with it. Each post shows the user’s ranking number next to their handle, so you always know how influential they are in the AI space.

You also get an engagement breakdown with metrics like views, comments, reposts, and bookmarks tracked over 24 hours, alongside a sentiment chart that shows whether the overall reaction on X was positive or negative.
I like this view. It makes it easy to digest an X post and conversation around it. For anyone who wants the full context of a trending AI conversation without doomscrolling through X, this view does a pretty good job of packaging it all in one place.
But will anyone actually use it?
That’s the real question. For people who to stay on top of AI news, Digg could be genuinely useful. But there’s no community on the site yet, and it’s not obvious why you’d choose it over your usual news app or RSS feed.
Digg says AI is just the test case, with plans to expand into other topics if this version gains traction. I can see Digg becoming a good source to aggregate and understand trending news topics from X. Whether it will be successful or die, only time will tell.
