March 31, 2008

Publish2 To Launch Digg Variation As Journalist Resource

Michael Arrington

20 comments »

Update: screenshot and additional details of Publish2 is here.

New startup Publish2 hasn’t launched or even entered private beta yet, but the company has scored $2.75 million in funding. The investor, Velocity Interactive Group, believes in the idea so much that they put both Ross Levinsohn and Jonathan Miller on the board of directors.

Publish2 is talking freely about the product, they just won’t show it to anyone yet. The idea is to create a news resource for news rooms, who are increasingly stressed due to headcount cuts and competition with blogs.

The main service will be a Digg-like social bookmarking site, says CEO Scott Karp. Like Digg, anyone can submit a link to a news story. But the only people who can vote on stories are pre-approved journalists. The goal, he says, is to avoid Digg’s spamming issues and ensure that only quality news can get to the top in any category. He says it’s “Digg, powered by journalists.”

It’s sort of the opposite of Yahoo Buzz, which launched last month, in its approach. Buzz only takes links from pre-approved sites, but anyone can vote. Top stories must pass through an editor, though, before going to the Yahoo home page.

It seems that everyone has tried one variation or another of Digg. In addition to Buzz, AOL launched Propeller in 2006, which also required editors to approve top stories. And there are others with models that fall somewhere in between.

Publish2 will also allow newsrooms to use the service to create customized headline feeds Presumably the quality will be high because only journalists get to vote stories up. That may be true. But it’s just as likely Publish2 will end up a ghost town. One of the main reasons for Digg’s success was the viral way stories spread. People send stories to their friends to get them to Digg them up. Those people, seeing Digg perhaps for the first time, may come back to read the news. Publish2 won’t have that benefit.

We’ll withhold judgment until the product launched and we can take a look for ourselves.

  • Sphere It

Trackbacks/Pings (Trackback URL)

  1. hype.yeebase.com
  2. Are bloggers being stiffed by one of their own? | WinExtra
  3. TechCrunch Japanese アーカイブ » Publish2―Diggのバリエーションは失業ジャーナリストを救済するか

Comments

RSS feed for comments on this post.

  1. Jason Jenkins

    another headline with digg in the title…man this getting old..indiestartup.com you just got yourself a new reader…techcrunch.. fyi THERES MORE SITES OTHER THAN DIGG GEEEEZZZZ!

  2. Martin

    If the only people entitled to vote on stories are journalist how is this in any way similar to social news sites like digg, reddit, mixx etc..

    I can see this tool being used by news stations to gather up to date news from the net without have to surf for hours, but people that visit social news sites don’t really need main stream news to find these stories and report them….I use digg and reddit for that.

    Maybe this platform will make those wacky web stories more excessable to baby boomer’s like my father that have no idea what digg, reddit, mixx are.

  3. Ben Toth

    given the limited nature of the peer-review system involved the only stories that will get through are the ones that would have got through anyway - press-release, fake survey, non-political stuff. How does serious investigative journalism happen in a world without serious investigative journalists?

  4. Angel

    Tank you, for you blog

    Ciudad Tech

  5. Jesus H Christ

    I want to know what they plan to do with that ~$3 million dollars. Considering they could some modify pligg or out source a clone for a couple grand.

    That in itself should be a big red flag for failure.

  6. * Miss Universe

    The aim may be to do away with the bias towards top members.

    And have those who are really passionate and sophisticated vote.

    The only problem is motivating those busy Journalist to visit the site and staying on long enough without any distractions that usually occur in a high stress environment

  7. Shafqat

    Mike - you are right that Publish2 is just one of many companies who’ve taken a stab at Digg-like variations. However, I’m pretty confident that there is plenty of space in the market for the right product (still holding judgement on Publish2). The reason being that 95% percent of internet users probably haven’t heard of digg or propeller or mixx. It all comes down to a product that the mainstream can understand and want. Coupled with solid execution, there are opportunities abound. Of course, I may be completely wrong, in which case my startup is screwed!

  8. Scott Karp

    Hi Mike,

    Just wanted to correct what you have in CrunchBase:

    “The company announced an inital $2.75 million round of financing in March 2008, prior to launch or even a private beta of the product.”

    As you might have found from reading our blog, I’ve been writing for months about Publish2’s private beta, which launched late last year. For example:

    http://blog.publish2.com/2008/.....ournalism/

    A number of tech/media journalists have been beta testing the product, with agreement not to write about it just yet — it’s tricky, you know, when the journalists who cover your industry are also part of your core user base. I would love to have you as a beta tester, if you would agree to that.

    Cheers,
    Scott

  9. thomas marban

    michael, are >variations< the new clones?

  10. Mike B

    There already exists a site for journalists to keep up with the news they need to cover. It is called drudgereport.com

  11. mohamed

    can you give me your view about my blog and can i be your friend and i invite you to put my RSS on your site and i will put your RSS on my blog(my blog url :www.computerworld4y.blogspot.com)

  12. Frank Church

    So, where are all the wanneabe bloggers coming from in the comments section? Do they just use technorati, see you at the top, and want to befriend you all?

    I’m not sure how to say this nicely (obv), nor preempt the problem ahead of time, but the comments section is being drug down. I may as well stick to RSS and never bother to click-thru.

  13. I Am Not Posting To Spam My Blog

    In the MSM vs Digg/blogosphere argument, I generally come down on the side of the paid professional rather than that of the geek with too much spare time.

    But even so, the thought that occurs to me is “so they’re asking the dinosaurs to steer the asteroid”.

  14. Trivia Quizzes

    What a joke concept. Like journalists don’t or can’t spam just as well as any consumer? How about them pushing their own stories to the top?

  15. Michael Arrington

    Scott, yeah, that must be super tricky.

  16. Pandrogas

    Almost seems like they could do something similar with free forum software and saved some people a couple million dollars.

  17. unnamed newspaper webdev

    Trivia Quizzes : ‘How about them pushing their own stories to the top?’

    They will, seriously. I’ve got journalists posting their own stories and I totally am seeing this on our newspaper site…