Skip to Content
The Daily Dot home
The Daily Dot home
Advertisement
Unclick

Karma Decay growing in popularity

Most interesting man

Karma Decay, a site we wrote about earlier, has been a huge hit Reddit today. By letting users search against an index of images posted to the social news site, it could serve as a powerful tool in fighting the bane of any Internet community: multiple posts on the same link or subject, or reposts.

Featured Video

But the story doesn’t end there. The site itself is full of meta (self-referential) Easter eggs; it laughs at the practice while fighting it.

Take the logo, for instance. That’s actually a collage composed of hundreds of popular image reposts from Reddit.

And the logo is itself a repost of sorts (at least in terms of concept).

Advertisement

Karma Decay’s creator, metabeing, invited another redditor, Iserys, to create it because, about a month ago he created a similar collage and posted it to Reddit. That image was a play on the “most interesting man in the world” meme.

“I don’t always repost,” the image read, “but when I do, I repost them all.”

That meme has been posted ad nauseam on Reddit recently; the image is one of the most commonly seen on the site.

Irsiery’s collage was a big success. It even hit Reddit’s front page -- giving the redditor a few thousand karma points, the site’s internal mechanism for rewarding quality submissions. By mocking the practice of reposting images for karma, Iserys gained a whole lot of karma.

Advertisement

Karma Decay’s name, too, has an interesting background. A recent post on Reddit linked to a post on image board 4Chan, a site famous for generating image memes that spread throughout the Internet, and especially Reddit.

In the image, a 4Chan user complained, in part, that Reddit’s karma system was ruining the quality of content online.

From the ensuing discussion, one Redditor came up with the experession “Karma Decay” -- and hence the inspiration for the site’s name.

Why all the meta humor? It’s Internet culture at its best: self-referential, derivative, and yet still wildly creative.

Advertisement

Or maybe it was just destined to be that way. Karma Decay’s creator named himself metabeing, after all.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter