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🕑4 min reading time
Table of Contents:
What is RSS? ·How does RSS work? ·How to get started? ·Tips for using RSS wisely ·Conclusion: If RSS was so great, why'd it die in the first place?
Imagine an open version of Twitter or Facebook News Feed, with no psy-op ads, owned by no oligopoly, manipulated by no algorithm, and all underyour full control.
Imagine a version of the newsletter where you don't have to worry about them selling your email to scammers, labyrinth-like unsubscribe pages, or stuffing your inbox with ever more crap.
Now imagine this existed and was extremely popular 15 years ago. Then we got suckered by the shiny walled gardens.
Well, it's time to make like a tree and goback to the future, baby!
Unlike newsletters where you give each publisher your email (and they may abuse that trust), RSS works on a "don't call me, I'll call you" policy.
An RSS feed is a text file on a website. It's just a bunch of posts – no tracking or "personalization" – like a printed newspaper:
Then, whatever RSS reader app you use – you can use any app made by anyone – it'll call the websites for the feedsyou specifically opted into, no more or less. The websites can't force it in the other direction.
Your app then shows you your posts in good ol' reverse chronological order. (Some apps let you add extra filters, but unlike social media algorithms,you control 'em.) Apps also make the posts prettier than raw text:
Really Simple, indeed!
(Note: there's something very similar to RSS called "Atom", but all modern apps work equally with both.)
First, you need a reader app. I'm currently using the minimalistInoreader, butFeedly is the most popular, and folks I know useThe Old Reader. See thislist of readers.
To add a feed to your app, just paste a link to the blog/site, and your app will automatically find the feed! RSS also lets you follow creators on YouTube, Substack, Medium, and more.
But what to follow? Might I recommend...
(And, selfishly:my new interactive, educational projects andmy blog)
Well, Google killed Google Reader in 2013, the #1 RSS reader at the time. This was to make way for Google Plus, which failed. The sacrificial lamb was for nothing.
But Google only did what nearlyeveryone – including yours truly – did in 2013: leave the open, decentralized Web 1.0 for the shiny new Web 2.0 platforms. Why? Well, it was more fun & convenient.
But now in 2021, for most of us, social media is verynot fun andnot convenient. That's why I went back to the future with RSS, and wrote this post encouraging you to do the same!
(Ok, RSS had two more problems: 1) Getting overwhelmed with feeds. As said above, the only cure is to trim ruthlessly. 2) RSS lets you serve text/link/image ads, butnot the creepy user-tracking ads. In 2013 that was the "best" way make money on the web, but these days ad revenue is dying, and subscriptions like Patreon/Substack are thriving.)
And that's all, folks! Now you know how to escape the attention-draining, empathy-killing, critical-thought-suffocating siren song of the algorithms. And get your inbox less cluttered with newsletters.
Here's to a renaissance for a kinder, better web. 💖
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