Digg, the social voting news aggregator that is perhaps the web startup most dogged by sale rumors in all of Silicon Valley, is close to selling to Google for “around $200 million,” according to TechCrunch.
Sale rumors have followed the company for years, and the company finally went out and hired dealmaking investment bank Allen & Co. to try to help sell it, last December. The price we heard then was $300 million, so maybe Digg has a depreciating shelf life? Or maybe it met the reality of the market value of news aggregators? Indeed, this is the third time that a Google purchase rumor has surfaced within this past year.
But maybe it has a lot of potential for Google. More on that, below.
First, the latest data from comScore about June social networking traffic shows that Digg has some major competitors. Most prominently, Yahoo! Buzz, which uses a slightly different method of calculating a news article’s popularity, brought in more than 9.2 million unique US visitors last month versus Digg’s 6.2 million. Digg grew 42 percent from 4.4 million the previous June — but that was before Yahoo! Buzz even launched.
Also, this past year, AOL re-launched a news aggregator site, Propeller, which it had previously launched as a Digg competitor housed at netscape.com. Today, in fact, Propeller just introduced a new look and feel that is strongly reminiscent of Yahoo! Buzz. Considering that AOL has, according to the June comScore numbers cited above, managed to grow its Community site and its AIM profiles by integrating those features with its large, existing user base, this seems like the right call.
Just as Buzz integrates top stories into its homepage — which helps promote Buzz to the Yahoo masses — so too does the new version of Propeller integrate into AOL’s homepage.
Which then begs the question: If Yahoo and AOL can build their own news aggregator properties, why can’t Google refine its own Google News site — where Digg may or may not be integrated with — or start its own Digg clone rather than buy Digg in the first place? Presumably, Yahoo! Buzz is worth more than Digg if one looks only at traffic numbers. And Propeller could very well be headed for success, as well.
However, as the TechCrunch piece notes, Digg’s voting system seems to have fascinated Google. Is Google more interested in Digg’s algorithm than its name?
Google has been quite interested in “social search” for months — broadly defined as the use of social data like you and your friends preferences, to help determine search results. It has more recently been experimenting with letting its search users vote on the quality of rankings, similar to how Digg users vote on stories. Just maybe, Digg could teach Google something about social search.
Another interesting angle to this story is that Digg currently has an advertising deal with Microsoft. If Google does buy Digg, don’t expect that to last long. After losing out of Yahoo search advertising to Google, could Microsoft really stand to lose another revenue stream to its main rival? Maybe we’ll see a counter-offer?
[MG Siegler contributed to this story.]

6:55 pm
Google To Buy Digg for 200 Million? said:
[...] immediately change with a Google takeover. As reported by TechCrunch and commented on by scores of excited, nervous, furious, incredulous and indifferent [...]
7:29 pm
Digg this: Google to gobble Digg? » mathewingram.com/work | said:
[...] in the company for awhile). But does it make any sense for Google to do such a thing? Eric Eldon wonders why the Web giant wouldn’t just build its own Digg, just like Yahoo did with Buzz and AOL did [...]
8:09 pm
Google a punto de confirmar la compra de Digg, una mala noticia said:
[...] | Venture Beat Más información | Digg trackback ¿Recomendarías este post? Más noticias sobre: [...]
10:45 pm
Digg, Facebook Connect To Headline at f8Con - GigaOM said:
[...] explain that Google might be finally ready to buy the San Francisco-based Digg for $200 million. Why would Google buy instead of building their own Digg? It could help block Facebook Connect, for [...]
2:04 am
Selective denials fuel speculation about Digg’s sale » VentureBeat said:
[...] officially denying that the rumors had merit. So now that a fresh rumor is out there today that Digg is on the verge selling to Google — and we’ve heard nothing from Digg, it looks fishy — warranted or [...]
4:06 am
Anonymous said:
[...]
4:15 am
Digg Acquisition by Google: It’s Not Social, It’s Money - Profy.Com said:
[...] site for "around $200 million". Now what? Of course, a valid question here would be why Google is still acquiring companies offering all kinds of services when it could have been much simpler to build a similar service of [...]
8:47 am
Google & Digg - Joined By A Sorting Algorithm? « Kingsley 2.0 said:
[...] & Digg - Joined By A Sorting Algorithm? Speculation is still hot on whether or not Google will be acquiring Digg very soon. Hotter still is speculation on why in [...]
8:49 am
digg | Together Dating said:
[...] multiple sources. …News.com - Digital Media - http://news.cnet.com/8300-1023_3-93.html|||If Digg is worth $200M, how much are Yahoo! Buzz and AOL’s …Digg, the news aggregator that is perhaps the web startup most dogged by sale rumors in all of [...]
4:12 pm
Everyone: Digg has an announcement to make… No, not that. It’s Facebook Connect! » VentureBeat said:
[...] been on the lookout today for a Digg blog post denying the Google buyout rumor, but curiously, unlike last March, that isn’t coming… Instead, we have a post from [...]
11:32 pm
digg | Start a new day said:
[...] multiple sources. …News.com - Digital Media - http://news.cnet.com/8300-1023_3-93.html|||If Digg is worth $200M, how much are Yahoo! Buzz and AOL’s …Digg, the news aggregator that is perhaps the web startup most dogged by sale rumors in all of [...]
3:38 am
Rumor: ¿Google comprará Digg por $200 millones? | Search Engine Land en Español said:
[...] el rumor es verdad, Eric Eldon de VentureBeat pregunta algo muy interesante: ¿Por qué Google no construye su propia versión de Digg? Podría desde [...]
6:28 am
Startup Meme » Blog Archive ‘Digg’ makes an announcement on ‘Facebook Connect’ said:
[...] may have heard rumors related to Digg’s probable acquisition by Google. Though the rumor proved wrong, which we have mentioned in our last post. Now Digg’s founder [...]
1:13 pm
Google buries Digg deal. Marked as a dupe or just lame? » VentureBeat said:
[...] If the details are to be believed, a Digg sale was closer than it ever had been to happening. The deal, thought to be in the $200 million range, apparently derailed when Google wasn’t sure if Digg’s key technical team was a good fit for what Google apparently wanted to do with Digg. There had been a lot of talk that Google would use Digg’s technology to revamp its Google News product — something which we were sure made a lot of sense given how successful AOL and particularly Yahoo have been at building their own social news sites with Pro…. [...]
11:45 pm
The goal is simple with Yahoo Buzz: Yahoo homepage or bust » VentureBeat said:
[...] — and might just be enough to convince Google or Microsoft to finally buy Digg. Or at least build their own version. Tags: co:Digg, co:google, co:microsoft, co:yahoo SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “The goal is [...]
11:24 am
peHUB » Archive » peHUB First Read said:
[...] reports that Google is in “final negotiations” to acquire Digg for around $200 million. Eric Eldon thinks it would be cheaper for Google to just build its own [...]
9:27 am
Clipmarks Internal Clog » Google interested in social search said:
[...] interested in social search July 22, 2008 - 11:58 pm by Eric Goldstein Clipped from venturebeat.com:Google has been quite interested in “social search” for months — broadly defined as the use [...]
10:29 am
Digg beefs up its funding for major expansion plans » VentureBeat said:
[...] over 30 million monthly unique users, Digg is a juggernaut of a site. Despite perpetual rumors of an imminent acquisition by major players like Google or Microsoft, the social voting site is now [...]
1:23 pm
Breaking: Google News doesn’t break tech news » VentureBeat said:
[...] it’s usually not that fresh anymore. That similarity is interesting when you consider that Google was recently attempting to buy Digg, supposedly to revamp Google [...]