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July 20, 2012 05:00 pm GMT
Original Link: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IDb_k-0letg/
The Power Users Are Revolting
Digg, which in its heyday was effectively run by its power users, is dying. Wikitravel is probably joining it: two-thirds of its admins want to jump ship to the greener grass of the Wikimedia Foundation. Who in turn have their own people problems--a stubborn gender gap and a diminishing number of active admins. Meanwhile, across the Web, people are asking "Is StackOverflow being ruined by its moderators?"There's a common thread here. Site starts up; site scales; a power-law minority of its users become its key community, and if/when that community withers, the entire site is endangered. The examples above are edge cases who explicitly assign admin rights to unpaid users, or take the power law to its extreme. But they indicate a larger point.Like it or not, we live in the Age of Social Media, and the wars for dominance have just begun. Facebook bought Instagram as a defensive move. They're clearly in Google's sights--and before you laugh, bear in mind that Google+ traffic is apparently up 43% since December and now surpasses LinkedIn's. Path is gunning for Facebook too, whether they admit it or not. App.net just set its sights on Twitter. Meanwhile, Reddit is rampant, Pinterest just erupted out of nowhere, and Quora continues to underachieve.But how do you conquer an enemy social network?Original Link: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IDb_k-0letg/
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