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I am not happy about needing to sign into Facebook and then having any story I digg showing up on my Facebook timeline.

That's an overstep that will keep me off the site.



Some discussion in the blog comments about that [1]:

>Using Facebook for account registration is a short-term solution that will seriously cut down on spam, while we take our time to develop more robust spam-filter technology. We know this isn’t ideal, so rest assured: we are working towards a more lasting solution. [2]

1. http://blog.digg.com/post/28441399381/welcome-to-digg-v1#com...

2. http://digg.com/faq#why-facebook


I think for a lot of people, being able to keep a pseudonymous identity is one of the few things that differentiates sites like reddit and digg from Facebook and twitter in the first place. Most people I know aren't crazy about letting others know what their reddit username is, let alone slapping everything they do on their Facebook feed.


Exactly. My id here is my first name and initial. Correlating my username here with my full name, which is unique worldwide, is easy.

My Reddit id on the other hand does not directly tie to my name, and that's just how I like it.

It's still fairly easy to find - I don't care if people who really want to figure it out, as I don't write anything I can't stand for. If I wanted true anonymity I'd take a lot of extra precautions.

I just care that my Reddit comments don't show up on the first few pages of a Google search for my name, as it lets me not think as much about my "professional image".

Putting it on Facebook is something I'd never let happen.

There's a huge difference between being possible to find what I've written if you really care about it vs. it being showed in the face of my family, for example.

And this is without being part of any controversial sub-reddits. There are plenty of sub-reddits or individual threads that are offensive enough or controversial enough that I'd imagine they'd die pretty quickly if people were forced connect their Reddit identities to anything that might be directly matched to their names.


While I haven't looked into this particular scenario. You used to be able to revoke individual permissions per app / site on FB. It's under Privacy > App & Sites, obviously it defaults to on as it's convenient for the site in question. An entirely different debate.


From the FAQ Under 'Why Facebook [for logins]?' "We're building the Digg for 2012" - I get that like 1/13 people on the planet are on Facebook, but what about the other 12? Twitter? Or even shudder Google?

My lawd man, build your own. You restricted yourself to 6 weeks, not users.




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