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681 points mikerg87 | 7 comments | | HN request time: 1.03s | source | bottom
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dev-slash-zero ◴[] No.43992459[source]
I also would consider Digg to be the direct predecessor of Reddit. If I recall correctly it was more popular until possibly as late as 2010.
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1. tantalor ◴[] No.43994372[source]
fark.com
replies(2): >>43994507 #>>43994715 #
2. 0xEF ◴[] No.43994507[source]
Fark feels like the echo of a dream these days. It's like the Friendster of news aggregators; it came on the scene first, set the tone for everything that followed, then faded from memory.
3. RankingMember ◴[] No.43994715[source]
I only knew it through the lens of it being a (good natured) punching bag of somethingawful.com. Today it's still up and being updated regularly, while somethingawful hasn't had a new article in half a decade+.
replies(2): >>43995190 #>>43996037 #
4. the_af ◴[] No.43995190[source]
Something Awful is also missing from this history. Maybe too niche? Though for geeks and gamers it was well known, and (checks Wikipedia) it was launched on 1999...

It was certainly a notable part of the internet culture of the era.

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5. RankingMember ◴[] No.43995886{3}[source]
I think it might not be well-known how much of current internet culture cascaded out from the hive that was the SA forums. 4chan was started by an SA goon, as was bellingcat, for example.
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6. GuinansEyebrows ◴[] No.43996037[source]
Drew Curtis Presents Drew Curtis' Fark.com By Drew Curtis
7. the_af ◴[] No.43996639{4}[source]
Wow. I knew about 4chan but not about bellingcat having its roots in SA.