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A couple of timely blog posts remind us that RSS is alive, well, and can help you resist enshittification of the Web.

Last week, Caroline Crampton's blog post, The View from RSS really caught our attention, helped by its subtitle: What the web looks like when you subscribe to 2,000 RSS feeds. We were not the only ones who it grabbed: at the weekend, Cory Doctorow also picked up on it in a post called The web is bearable with RSS.

One of the snags of reporting on the tech sector is tackling the constant stream of announcements of radical new technology that is going to change everything. Another, of course, is trying to find out about them via websites in the 2020s, where even with an in-browser ad-blocker, plus a network one too, and an anti-cookie warning extension, many websites are still horribly cluttered.

So when someone following two thousand feeds tells you that an RSS reader can strip a lot of the cruft away, and a caped crusader of the blogosphere agrees ... well, this vulture sits up and pays attention.

The origins of the RSS system go back to the 1990s, and like the Markdown markup language we reported on earlier today, the RSS 1.0 standard was co-developed by the late Aaron Swartz when he was just 14 years old.

With enough RSS feeds, web search only becomes an occasional hell.

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[-] lvxferre@mander.xyz 10 points 9 hours ago

I mentioned this in another thread, but I never ditched RSS. It's simply too convenient to keep track of multiple sites, that you want to check regularly but would be a bother to do manually. Youtube channels, anime/manga/comics sites, even the communities you moderate.

I'm glad to see people picking it up again, though. Perhaps then Liferea will see a bit more love.

this post was submitted on 09 Mar 2026
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