The problem I think is that nowadays more and more it's harder to find RSS support services and you send up having to resort to some third party application or service that will get some content and convert them into a RSS format. Like, for instance, instagram obviously doesn't offer support to RSS, the same goes for facebook and so forth.
"Three sites out of thousands" is disingenuous. Twitter alone is enough to make the difference.
For "RSS is as alive as ever" to be true, it would follow that you'd expect to find as many people publishing their content via RSS as the case before. They're not. There are many, many, many derelict blogs, all effectively abandoned because their authors migrated to Twitter, intentionally/consciously or not.
fairly strong claims from someone who had no trouble calling someone else's disingenuous. care to share the data so that we can see what you have seen, ostensibly related to blog atrophy over time? should be fairly easy to spot when twitter cropped up if, as you've claimed, "they're not [publishing their content via RSS as the case before.]"
or, it could be - just floating this - that lots of blogs are posting on RSS, /and/ twitter has gotten a lot more traffic from previous RSS users.
Although you might be, I'm not here out of an a priori desire to experience the pleasure of disagreement, nor to engage in debate as an academic exercise (i.e. with truth and understanding being an incidental concern).
Your request for data is in bad faith, and you're commenting in bad faith.
They are large (popular) sites though. They have actively decided to not support RSS as they believe it is counter to their advantage. It's not like they don't have the resources to support RSS.
What this means is that we have a moral obligation to support and push RSS in our work/spare time. This is something I now recognise I need to do at least.
Any decent RSS reader will find that link for you if you point it at the url that gets you the html. Twitter and Facebook no longer support it because they're predatory, I take it as just one more indication the entire platform should be avoided.
I use Inoreader for my rss reader. it supports Twitter, faceboook (public pages) and YouTube even though they don’t have RSS feeds. So even though some sites kill there rss, the technologists provide.
I would love if people would see that their networks they maintain are of incredible value. As a consequence I would like to profit of e.g. information network a person x has. My idea is that every person exposes an aggregated RSS feed of feeds they consume. Every interesting person that tells me their secret RSS link would empower me.
I started a couple of projects in that area, one is a piece of glue code [0] to automatically get a feed of a site, even if there isn't one. It maps html to a feed structure, which works decent, fixing broken feeds after the html changes is now the main concern.
> every person exposes an aggregated RSS feed of feeds they consume
I like this idea, and I think it is something that RSS is missing. The "bubbles" that we decry on social networks is largely caused by our inability to share feeds. Every feed is tailor made to the person seeing it, so everyone is in their own bubble by default. This is unlike Reddit, in which members of a given subreddit can see the same feed.
RSS empowers users with complete control over their own feed, but there is still no mechanism by which we can share our reality. We are still bubbled away by default, and thus will result in the same toxic bubbles as social networks.
This idea vaguely reminds me of Napster back in the day. One of the great things about it was not getting the music you were looking for but finding that user with similar tastes and checking out what else they were sharing. I remember finding several new artists I fell in love with that way.
Interesting thought. I'm torn because on one hand I agree with you, had incredible value of mining people's twitter likes as a way of truly sampling other people's feeds (often times find them to be better quality and more honest than retweets).
On the other hand - personally subscribe to a very, very wide variety of RSS feeds ... some heterodox enough in opinions that I would be instantly canceled / run out of other social zones. So there's a very real sense of protection in RSS feed privacy that's a huge plus there, and would never want to give up.
I built a custom RSS Reader just to streamline my reading list. If I am bored and want to read something I don't go to social media I read what I marked for reading later. https://reading.ashishb.net
Non-rhetoric question - why would one need a feed on craigslist? I've ever used craigslist only in two ways: 1) trying to sell something (about 20% success rate) 2) trying to buy something for cheap. In both cases, RSS feed serves to useful function - as a seller, I only need to publish one post, as a buyer, I need to find who sells cheap used bikes, call/email them and be done with it, I'm not going to monitor cheap used bike market for years to come.
Is there some important craigslist use case I am missing here?
If you're looking to buy something locally, you could subscribe to an RSS feed of the search results. If an item became available, it would appear in your feed.
I've used craigslist many times to (a) find an apartment to rent or (b) find a used car to buy. In both cases I was prepared to wait a month or perhaps more until what I wanted came along. Who wants to spend a month clicking reload on a webpage every half hour?
I also used to watch a feed of all the used stuff for sale within 20 miles of me (I'm in a remote area), with a bunch of filters to remove stuff I didn't care about. Quite often I came across bargains on stuff I wasn't actively looking for. Like unique handmade high-quality furniture.
The usage mode for buying on craigslist is nothing like the usage mode for buying on amazon. It is not instant gratification.
RSS allows us to decentralize aggregation of content, but still has some of the same critical pitfalls of social networks. Most notably, the "bubble" effect is as strong as ever: my feed is entirely unique and non-reproducible. I have complete control over it, but I cannot see a feed as another user without perfectly replicating their setup.
I think there is a missing component that would allow us to create a decentralized social network of RSS feeds. If we cannot share our reality with others, we're going to reproduce the same toxic patterns that social networks exhibit today, but it's going to be completely unmanageable.
But I think in real life as well people live in their own bubbles. We see the world as we are but not for what it is. It's just that Internet takes it to whole different level.
I like to see Internet as catalyst. It accelerated speed of people becoming more conscious or more stupid. The choice is still in the hands of individual like it was before Internet.
There are definitely bubbles in real life, but they are far less insular and toxic. I can't "unsubscribe" from a person that I work with. Everyone around me shares in a lot of the content that I see. Content streams like TV channels give me the ability to switch channels and see what others are seeing.
Like you said, the internet takes this to a whole different level, and then takes control away from me. How do I tell Youtube that I'm just interested in researching Qanon, and not that I want to be recommended it? How do I tell facebook to stop recommending me content related to some topic? I can't change the channel anymore, and I'm at their mercy. That's a huge problem.
RSS is fantastic in that it gives you complete control over your content streams, but there's still something missing to let you "change the channel."
What's the difference between a bubble and personal interests? A technology that allows no way of filtering out the things you find uninteresting is about as useless as one that doesn't provide any means of discovering new interests. Regardless, this isn't the issue we should be focusing on, communities turn toxic when they feed into the delusions, bad habits, vices, and narcissism of their members. That's less of a technological problem and more of a moral one. You can't produce moral behaviour by creating a new (or changing an existing one into a) platform that strictly enforces it, people will either subvert your rules by inventing ways to get around them or they will simply not use your platform and go elsewhere. The same problems exist in the offline world, and it's always more effective to address the root causes of the problem than it is to legislate and punish.
> That's less of a technological problem and more of a moral one.
I ascribe to a "medium is the message" type of mentality, where the design of your platform is going to inform the nature of the behavior on it. For example, Facebook's commenting system is, unfortunately, hot garbage. They don't track comment threads, and instead they have this weird "mention" system wherein the best you can do is @ someone and hope they remember the thread. You can't read a conversation in order, it's all jumbled up for some reason.
What kind of conversations arise from such a mess? It ends up being a convoluted stew of people just vaguely yelling in each other's directions. You can't maintain a thread of conversation, and neither can anyone else.
Furthermore, Facebook views all interacts as equal. However, users will often use "haha" and "angry" reacts in order to mock the more extreme and toxic comments. Facebook doesn't notice this, and goes "aha! This is a Good Comment. I will promote it." So what happens? The top comments on popular posts are often the most toxic, and they get the most visibility.
It's design like this that makes the internet a worse place. I think RSS is on the right track, but I think the fact that we can't see each other's feeds is a problem. Many will end up spiraling into a feedback loop of toxic content, with no way to see opposing viewpoints and a "way out". On Reddit, I can actively peek at r/Conservative and see what a completely different group of people are talking about. I can't quite do that with RSS.
> On Reddit, I can actively peek at r/Conservative and see what a completely different group of people are talking about. I can't quite do that with RSS.
Sorry, I didn't mean literally RSS with Reddit, I meant it as an analogy. Reddit lets me "peek" at r/Conservative, but I can't "peek" at your set of RSS feeds.
My question would be, why are there toxic posts on any of these platforms in the first place even before they are promoted? I don't see Reddit's model as a viable alternative, any subreddit with a large population seems to have fallen into a pit of lowest common denominator group think from which they'll never return. I don't think it's their architecture that's to blame, it's a disease that arises from a large population of self-interested people who aren't invested in the wellbeing of the community. They're there to see a funny meme, do some shitposting, and try to get some karma rather than meaningfully contribute. I think a good community can still thrive on a platform that has terrible tools, humans are adaptable and will make the best of a bad situation. The only thing that spoils that is a large enough group of people intent on making a bad situation worse for their own benefit.
> any subreddit with a large population seems to have fallen into a pit of lowest common denominator group think from which they'll never return. I don't think it's their architecture that's to blame
You should! Have you ever wondered why subreddits suddenly go to crap when they hit the front page? It's because people upvote without considering the subreddit that it was originally posted in. And that's partly because Reddit's design doesn't make the originating subreddit obvious enough, partly because you don't have to navigate to that subreddit to vote on it, and mostly because the front page hits a large number of unsubscribed folks that don't know the sub rules. So as people are idly scrolling through their feed, they see something funny, they go "heh, upvote." and move on. Whoops, that post was in r/Unexpected, and it wasn't unexpected at all. The top posts of that subreddit slowly become more homogenous with all the other popular subreddits, and we say the subreddit has died.
The most savvy subs will implement a stickied comment system. The top comment in the post will be stickied and allow people to vote on whether the post really belongs to the sub. They're able to filter out highly-upvoted irrelevant content this way, even if the sub hits the front page.
> why are there toxic posts on any of these platforms
People exist, there is no way around this. The best we can do is design around mitigating it, not amplifying it.
Oh man someone should totally invent OPML [0] or XBEL [1] and then everyone could easily publish their subscribed feeds. Then they could import those and have the same subscriptions! /s
Close; I don't literally want to have the same subscriptions. That would be like saying the only way I can see your Reddit feed is to literally subscribe to all the same subreddits. I just want to see a feed as someone else, without losing my own. It's technically possible today, but nobody has implemented it yet as a first-class feature.
But you can see exactly what you want from a blog using RSS. There is no way that I can get the same information you get to show up in my facebook feed. If I subscribe to blogs that you don't I see them in addition too, not instead of the stuff we both have in common.
> There is no way that I can get the same information you get to show up in my facebook feed.
Yeah this is the crux of the problem I'm identifying, it's a blind spot in social networks today. Everyone sees their own unique feed, and there's no way to share them, so everyone is in a bubble of size one. RSS is great because you finally have control over the content being recommended to you, but you still can't share entire feeds, so each person is still in a bubble of size one.
I switched to QuiteRSS from whatever I was using before awhile back. It works great and it has some niche features like auto tabbing back to the reader after opening a link.
A tip for those who love RSS but bemoan the slow death it's suffering. Sometimes it helps to simply send an e-mail to the owner of the website and thell them their RSS feed is broken or missing. I've done that and succeeded three times so far.
Sometimes they break the feed because they changed something but didn't bother to check if it affected their feed. This of course won't be of any effect to the big SV type companies, but it might with your local newspaper, municipality website, favourite blog, etc. Doesn't hurt to try.
I get a few emails a year, every year, asking why I don't have an RSS feed on my blog.
I totally have RSS on my blog, and have for every blog I've had for 20 years. It even has the appropriate HTML headers pointing to /feed.xml, so you can just pop the bare website URL into a feed reader and it will find it.
The main impediment I have had are magazines I subscribe to who are behind paywalls. Ars Technica and Talking Points Memo have a subscriber feed, but it's basically just an honor system thing for you to not go sharing it but they're the only ones. I'd honestly be okay if they just gave you a stub and had you click through, but they seem resistant to doing even that.
It's pretty basic to implement some kind of token scheme for the feed to bypass the paywall. It happens all the time for paid podcast feeds.
If you see large numbers of geographically dispersed feeds you can then look up who shared their key and have a word...
Skeptically I belive most sites just don't want to supply RSS/atom feeds as it bypasses their ability to track and advertise to you and having something like needing to deal with auth is a convenient excuse.
I maintain a blog site for a rather popular writer, and if something breaks our RSS feed there are some die-hards that will definitely write in to let us know :-)
It's worthwhile, because every time it happens it reinforces to us that having that feature is mandatory for keeping our paying users happy.
What decentralized web? Everything is behind some stupid WAF that blocks your IP for "being a robot" now unless you want to execute code for an unbounded amount of time before being able to get access to the paragraph of text you were tricked into reading from an SEO'd search reuslt. Even reading an RSS feed will probably get you blocked for a scraping attempt if the website is behind Cloudflare or some imitator.
RSS is great. I think it might have suffered a bit due to its associations with the childish behavior of a group of supposed adults (one in particular) squabbling over credit and control over something as trivial as the RSS spec. Many so-called RSS feeds actually use the superior Atom specification, which was described early on by at least one of its authors as “RSS without the psychopaths”.
alas, can't turn up that quote or anything close to that via Google :(
I don't think you're being downvoted for your thoughts, but rather, it's unclear what you're saying and how to read more about it - we appreciate the honesty :)
The thing that holds me back from using RSS again is three things. First of all my workstations are geared towards content creation and I shut down all notifications. My tablet and phone are what I use to consume and discover content and these form factors or maybe the app implementations don’t really lend to RSS for me. Secondly, there is so much more content out there compared to 10-15 years ago. I used to follow some sites that would have posts every so often. But sites like hacker news and Twitter have so much content it is hard to keep up. Thirdly, I just have too many other responsibilities to keep track of it all anymore.
RSS is nice as far as it goes, but we should think about enabling more than that. ActivityStreams is essentially RSS on steroids (for use cases beyond simple syndicated content) and is generally more appropriate for the "social" use cases that are quite popular nowadays. For example, it's essentially the underlying data format behind the Fediverse.
And having a hub, like WebSub, is nice for helping mobile users keep up with feeds without polling a ton of websites constantly and running down the battery.
The first is a contagion effect. People just started to assume RSS was 'over' because big names like Twitter and Craigslist dropped support after they realized supporting it isn't in their interest.
The second much more powerful factor is that the vast majority of users just want to see new stuff when they scroll. They probably never bothered to use RSS (you'd find these people on cat meme sites most of the time), and if they did they were happy to give it up the first time they saw the Facebook news feed. The fact that far greater numbers of people were watching the Fb news feed meant that RSS was more or less instantly irrelevant just based on sheer numbers of eyeballs available.
Feedly for the third time :) Been using it for years. Works fine on desktop/mobile, synchronizes great, has a bunch of useful features (bookmarks, tags, IFTTT integration, etc)
If you don't want an app/want to control your data, you can use other services that can be self-hosted service too (miniflux, ttrss, etc.). It will handle syncing and often has a fine web client, or else compatible with most RSS readers through e.g. Fever API. Miniflux has hosting they provide if you don't want to self-host. Been using miniflux for a few weeks and enjoying it, but I know ttrss and others are popular too.
Inoreader. Has all the features of Feedly (that I care about) at half the price. I switched recently after using Feedly for years and so far I'm very happy with it. Migration process was very painless.
On mobile, it has a killer feature. For the feeds that only give a short snippet and then require you to go to the site (i.e. ArsTechnica), you can just pull the page down and release. Inoreader will load the full article without requiring you to go to the website.
I also use it to subscribe to all the newsletters to keep my mailbox clean and Twitter users that I want to monitor but not follow on Twitter itself.
Been using Feedly for years now, since Google Reader died, one of the most useful tools around. And more sites support it than you think. RSS (and Atom, etc.) are not dead, they are just not fashionable.
Recently I noticed more and more podcasts don't provide RSS/Atom feeds directly, they link to iTunes, Spotify, Soundcloud etc but no feed, in some cases they link to one of the podcast hosting services that do have feeds for every podcast but not visible by any link or not being in the meta tags. Finding the URL for the feed becomes some sort hunting, in a few cases even though I liked a podcast I still can't subscribe because I don't maintain an account on those services.
But Facebook or Amazon or FAANG are not just feeds. Facebook has also all the other components - discovery for example, also basic storage provision (let's not forget that!).
If RSS did the job we wanted it would be used everywhere. It is a great solution to one tiny part of the jigsaw - and as half the comments on here are already "I have a great idea to extend RSS so that..." we all know this.
Decentralising is a good thing - but boy there is still a lot to solve.
I haven’t used RSS in a long long while but one problem I had with it was filtering. This was especially true where a site had frequent updates, say a news site, but there was no way to filter on the feed by topic unless the site provided custom feeds for each topic/category/tag. Has this gotten better?
From skimming around it looks like this still might be a limitation.
NewsBlur has a filtering feature, but I don't see a way to tweak it beyond mashing thumbs-up and thumbs-down buttons and hoping it gets the idea. Might be worth a shot, though, it's definitely better than nothing.
If the feed contains tags, you can do this per tag. But sadly there's nothing inferred / you can't do it based on other content. There are definitely some feeds I follow where I'd immediately filter out an author or three, but alas.
https://aktu.io is a news aggregator / rss reader that does just that. It automatically categorizes your feed items (politics, science, tech, etc...), extract topics and aggregates your feed items to news stories. You can then browse/filter your feeds by categories/topics.
The biggest blow to RSS was dealt by browsers dropping support for displaying it in human-readable form, not Twitter/whoever ceasing publishing them.
Thanks to that, now when someone, who doesn't know what that is, stumbles upon a website linking to one and follows such a link, they'll be greeted with gibberish. Previously, they could see buttons exposing the functionality of subscribing to such feeds and find out about this wonderful technology. Now, they'll just get the hell out of that page.
Can someone actually explain to me why Mozilla stopped building in an RSS reader into Firefox?
If it also can subscribe to substacks, it's like a Pocket that actually gets updates. Heck, they can just build it on Pocket!
It seems like that could be incredibly valuable for the open web — and a free tool for conveniently reading newsletters built into Firefox might even increase market share? Looks like they removed it in 2018...but I never heard of people switching to Firefox from Google Reader, so I assume it was never very good, or poorly advertised?
It's frustrating how Mozilla will use usage statistics as justification to kill a feature, whilst at the same time using nagging UI prompts to promote underperforming corporate decisions like Pocket and FFSync.
Perhaps they should have a rule that any feature proposed for deletion should be promoted equally aggressively for six months. If usage still doesn't increase then remove it.
True, I think third-party RSS readers are always going to be better though. Integration with specific partners and vendors makes RSS accessible. Mozilla would have developed something great, but it would have been tied to Mozilla products and services..
Browser sync is a fairly crucial feature for many users who have multiple devices, or even just dual-boot. Or who want a backup of their bookmarks and history.
I don't care about a competitive UX for the in browser support. Just something that vagually renders the XML as something readable with a button to add to reader of choice. Even just leaving the old address bar icon indicating there is a feed available would be nice.
Firefox itself never had a real rss-reader. It had rss-parser which was incorperated into the bookmark-ui, making it barely useful for the purpose if consuming feeds. 3rd-party feedreader coming as addons were more useful than this and they were not really good either. So it's no surprise this feature had low usage and was thus removed.
It's an uninformed comment about XSLT support being removed from browsers—not "about browser rss-feeds". Misinformation about something as consequential as that definitely has the potential to cause a non-zero amount of harm if people take it at face value.
> About link rel='about' missing. link rel='license' missing. § Imprint link rel='terms-of-service' missing. Privacy link rel='terms-of-service' missing. ShaarliGo
Big fan of RSS since back at least to the Google Reader days. I realized I was just checking the same websites over and over and decided to streamline the process. (That ended up in building up a backlog of entries in a feed and scrambling before whatever was about to expire, but that's another story).
After that shutdown I was on Feedly for a while, and now moved to self hosting miniflux [0] which I'm quite happy with. Haven't found the perfect Android app, but the miniflux web view (minimal, but effective) is growing on me. I also self-host rss-bridge [1] to wrangle some less ideal feeds (you can grab whole content, format as you like, etc.)
The downside here is that it doesn't support private toots. It would be nice if you can subscribe to anything in the fediverse then mastodon could create a private feed for you.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 196 ms ] threadShame on you people.
For "RSS is as alive as ever" to be true, it would follow that you'd expect to find as many people publishing their content via RSS as the case before. They're not. There are many, many, many derelict blogs, all effectively abandoned because their authors migrated to Twitter, intentionally/consciously or not.
or, it could be - just floating this - that lots of blogs are posting on RSS, /and/ twitter has gotten a lot more traffic from previous RSS users.
Your request for data is in bad faith, and you're commenting in bad faith.
What this means is that we have a moral obligation to support and push RSS in our work/spare time. This is something I now recognise I need to do at least.
I started a couple of projects in that area, one is a piece of glue code [0] to automatically get a feed of a site, even if there isn't one. It maps html to a feed structure, which works decent, fixing broken feeds after the html changes is now the main concern.
[0] https://github.com/damoeb/rss-proxy
I like this idea, and I think it is something that RSS is missing. The "bubbles" that we decry on social networks is largely caused by our inability to share feeds. Every feed is tailor made to the person seeing it, so everyone is in their own bubble by default. This is unlike Reddit, in which members of a given subreddit can see the same feed.
RSS empowers users with complete control over their own feed, but there is still no mechanism by which we can share our reality. We are still bubbled away by default, and thus will result in the same toxic bubbles as social networks.
On the other hand - personally subscribe to a very, very wide variety of RSS feeds ... some heterodox enough in opinions that I would be instantly canceled / run out of other social zones. So there's a very real sense of protection in RSS feed privacy that's a huge plus there, and would never want to give up.
Could definitely use some more contributors
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24840310
Is there some important craigslist use case I am missing here?
I also used to watch a feed of all the used stuff for sale within 20 miles of me (I'm in a remote area), with a bunch of filters to remove stuff I didn't care about. Quite often I came across bargains on stuff I wasn't actively looking for. Like unique handmade high-quality furniture.
The usage mode for buying on craigslist is nothing like the usage mode for buying on amazon. It is not instant gratification.
I think there is a missing component that would allow us to create a decentralized social network of RSS feeds. If we cannot share our reality with others, we're going to reproduce the same toxic patterns that social networks exhibit today, but it's going to be completely unmanageable.
I like to see Internet as catalyst. It accelerated speed of people becoming more conscious or more stupid. The choice is still in the hands of individual like it was before Internet.
Like you said, the internet takes this to a whole different level, and then takes control away from me. How do I tell Youtube that I'm just interested in researching Qanon, and not that I want to be recommended it? How do I tell facebook to stop recommending me content related to some topic? I can't change the channel anymore, and I'm at their mercy. That's a huge problem.
RSS is fantastic in that it gives you complete control over your content streams, but there's still something missing to let you "change the channel."
I ascribe to a "medium is the message" type of mentality, where the design of your platform is going to inform the nature of the behavior on it. For example, Facebook's commenting system is, unfortunately, hot garbage. They don't track comment threads, and instead they have this weird "mention" system wherein the best you can do is @ someone and hope they remember the thread. You can't read a conversation in order, it's all jumbled up for some reason.
What kind of conversations arise from such a mess? It ends up being a convoluted stew of people just vaguely yelling in each other's directions. You can't maintain a thread of conversation, and neither can anyone else.
Furthermore, Facebook views all interacts as equal. However, users will often use "haha" and "angry" reacts in order to mock the more extreme and toxic comments. Facebook doesn't notice this, and goes "aha! This is a Good Comment. I will promote it." So what happens? The top comments on popular posts are often the most toxic, and they get the most visibility.
It's design like this that makes the internet a worse place. I think RSS is on the right track, but I think the fact that we can't see each other's feeds is a problem. Many will end up spiraling into a feedback loop of toxic content, with no way to see opposing viewpoints and a "way out". On Reddit, I can actively peek at r/Conservative and see what a completely different group of people are talking about. I can't quite do that with RSS.
you can, go to old.reddit.com/r/Conservative/.rss
You should! Have you ever wondered why subreddits suddenly go to crap when they hit the front page? It's because people upvote without considering the subreddit that it was originally posted in. And that's partly because Reddit's design doesn't make the originating subreddit obvious enough, partly because you don't have to navigate to that subreddit to vote on it, and mostly because the front page hits a large number of unsubscribed folks that don't know the sub rules. So as people are idly scrolling through their feed, they see something funny, they go "heh, upvote." and move on. Whoops, that post was in r/Unexpected, and it wasn't unexpected at all. The top posts of that subreddit slowly become more homogenous with all the other popular subreddits, and we say the subreddit has died.
The most savvy subs will implement a stickied comment system. The top comment in the post will be stickied and allow people to vote on whether the post really belongs to the sub. They're able to filter out highly-upvoted irrelevant content this way, even if the sub hits the front page.
> why are there toxic posts on any of these platforms
People exist, there is no way around this. The best we can do is design around mitigating it, not amplifying it.
[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPML
[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/XBEL
Yeah this is the crux of the problem I'm identifying, it's a blind spot in social networks today. Everyone sees their own unique feed, and there's no way to share them, so everyone is in a bubble of size one. RSS is great because you finally have control over the content being recommended to you, but you still can't share entire feeds, so each person is still in a bubble of size one.
Any youtube channel you like
Any subreddit you like: https://old.reddit.com/wiki/rss
Nitter allows RSS feeds of twitter accounts, useful for low post volume accounts like those of your local government functions.
Many (possibly most?) news websites have some RSS functionality.
And lets not forget the wide world of podcasting.
Some interesting blogs I follow are https://unintendedconsequenc.es/feed/ and https://astralcodexten.substack.com/feed/
Sometimes they break the feed because they changed something but didn't bother to check if it affected their feed. This of course won't be of any effect to the big SV type companies, but it might with your local newspaper, municipality website, favourite blog, etc. Doesn't hurt to try.
I totally have RSS on my blog, and have for every blog I've had for 20 years. It even has the appropriate HTML headers pointing to /feed.xml, so you can just pop the bare website URL into a feed reader and it will find it.
If you see large numbers of geographically dispersed feeds you can then look up who shared their key and have a word...
Skeptically I belive most sites just don't want to supply RSS/atom feeds as it bypasses their ability to track and advertise to you and having something like needing to deal with auth is a convenient excuse.
It's worthwhile, because every time it happens it reinforces to us that having that feature is mandatory for keeping our paying users happy.
I don't think you're being downvoted for your thoughts, but rather, it's unclear what you're saying and how to read more about it - we appreciate the honesty :)
EDIT: Appears the references are to Dave Winer - this is an excellent history, I wish I found a shorter one, but this is really great: https://www.vice.com/en/article/a3mm4z/the-rise-and-demise-o...
It’s not there. But I have no doubt about its accuracy. It didn’t survive long enough to be indexed.
The first is a contagion effect. People just started to assume RSS was 'over' because big names like Twitter and Craigslist dropped support after they realized supporting it isn't in their interest.
The second much more powerful factor is that the vast majority of users just want to see new stuff when they scroll. They probably never bothered to use RSS (you'd find these people on cat meme sites most of the time), and if they did they were happy to give it up the first time they saw the Facebook news feed. The fact that far greater numbers of people were watching the Fb news feed meant that RSS was more or less instantly irrelevant just based on sheer numbers of eyeballs available.
https://feedly.com/apps.html
* I assume there are other ways to skin this cat, but this is what I do.
On mobile, it has a killer feature. For the feeds that only give a short snippet and then require you to go to the site (i.e. ArsTechnica), you can just pull the page down and release. Inoreader will load the full article without requiring you to go to the website.
I also use it to subscribe to all the newsletters to keep my mailbox clean and Twitter users that I want to monitor but not follow on Twitter itself.
It was google reader -> digg -> ino reader -> self hosted TTRSS (using now).
Anyone got suggestions for good non-mainstream rss? in area of Tech/dev/design/ui/business/finance etc.,
If RSS did the job we wanted it would be used everywhere. It is a great solution to one tiny part of the jigsaw - and as half the comments on here are already "I have a great idea to extend RSS so that..." we all know this.
Decentralising is a good thing - but boy there is still a lot to solve.
https://spritelyproject.org/
From skimming around it looks like this still might be a limitation.
Thanks to that, now when someone, who doesn't know what that is, stumbles upon a website linking to one and follows such a link, they'll be greeted with gibberish. Previously, they could see buttons exposing the functionality of subscribing to such feeds and find out about this wonderful technology. Now, they'll just get the hell out of that page.
Mozilla, champion of the free internet, right...
If it also can subscribe to substacks, it's like a Pocket that actually gets updates. Heck, they can just build it on Pocket!
It seems like that could be incredibly valuable for the open web — and a free tool for conveniently reading newsletters built into Firefox might even increase market share? Looks like they removed it in 2018...but I never heard of people switching to Firefox from Google Reader, so I assume it was never very good, or poorly advertised?
https://www.ghacks.net/2018/07/25/mozilla-plans-to-remove-rs...
In short, updating the feature to competitive UX and security expectations wouldn’t have been worth the effort based on the usage numbers.
Perhaps they should have a rule that any feature proposed for deletion should be promoted equally aggressively for six months. If usage still doesn't increase then remove it.
wat
P.S.: I prefer atom/RFC4287 for being well-defined and with e.g. sane dates.
After that shutdown I was on Feedly for a while, and now moved to self hosting miniflux [0] which I'm quite happy with. Haven't found the perfect Android app, but the miniflux web view (minimal, but effective) is growing on me. I also self-host rss-bridge [1] to wrangle some less ideal feeds (you can grab whole content, format as you like, etc.)
[0] https://miniflux.app/
[1] https://github.com/RSS-Bridge/rss-bridge
"Your feed URL is [instance]/users/[username].rss or .atom" [0]
NOTE may vary from instance to instance. E.G. "social.tchncs.de/@[useralias].rss
And (haven't tried it) an RSS-TO-Mastodon method: [1] using 'Feed2toot'
[0] https://mastodon.social/@brownpau/100523448408374430
[1] https://carlchenet.com/get-your-rss-feeds-to-mastodon-with-t...