According to Google Trends, during the past few years, there has been nothing but a few minor bumps that faded away as quickly as they came. I love RSS because i do not have to scroll through dozens of different news sites all day and i would love it to return.

EDIT: Typical case of people only reading the headline. I was asking why people are hyped over something that did NOT happen.

    • 1bluepixel@lemmy.world
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      For me, the value of RSS is bypassing the fucking algorithm.

      Just give me the raw feed from the websites I like. No suggestions, no “someone else liked this.” Just the raw firehose of content that I asked for.

      • TrustingZebra@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        I mean algorithms have their flaws but there is a reason they became popular.

        Subscribe to a dozen RSS feeds and suddenly you have more content then you can read with no easy way to sort through the chuff. Also no easy way to discover content beyond your feeds.

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          The reason why RSS didn’t become popular was because content creators didn’t know how to monetize them while still having to pay for hosting fees.

          Social media built walled gardens that could drive traffic to certain content creators if it was in the social media company’s best interest. Content creators moved to social media since the carrot was too much to resist.

        • techgearwhips@lemmy.ml
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          The way I like it. The showRSS feed is beautiful after using Google Home feed for so long. I’ll never go back to ads and Google trying to sell me pixel products and reviews every day

          • TrustingZebra@lemmy.one
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            1 year ago

            Funny you need YouTube. I have been rediscovering the “Subscriptions” tab recently. It’s a chronological view (newest first) of all Channels I am subscribed to, but I actually haven’t used it for years.

            I’ve gotten used to the YouTube algorithm, going to the homepage and just finding whatever seemingly interesting videos YouTube suggests to me. However recently, YouTube made the strange decision to disable the homepage for people who disable Watch History. Now my YouTube homepage is entirely empty.

            Anyway, going to the subscription tab it’s just a massive collection of random channels I’ve subscribed to over the years. It’s too messy to keep my interest, and I’ve actually been using YouTube less.

            • average_internet_enjoyer@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Same here, I have removed the home page (using ReVanced) so it automatically loads my subscriptions, as I found those has far better videos than my home feed at all. Homepage has really died, I keep getting the same videos I already watched, some obscure 39 views video keep annoying me and because I use YouTube music I also get recommended music, except they have like 100 views. It’s just so terrible.

              I think YouTube has been disabling the homepage, so you are more intrigued to enable it. But it really just makes your and my lives easier. Either way it’s the only way to really enjoy the videos nowadays. Hopefully another platform comes along, but that hasn’t happened at all in over 20 years

              • TrustingZebra@lemmy.one
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                1 year ago

                That’s the thing, I personally liked the YouTube homepage! Even with watch history disabled, I found it gave me decent mix of recommendations based on my region, subscriptions and Liked videos. I know many people dislike the YouTube algorithm but it actually worked well for me.

                Now that YouTube has disabled my homepage (held hostage unless I turn on Watch History), I am far less inclined to go on YouTube and watch random videos. Which is probably a good thing for me, let’s be honest. On the other hand I don’t know what YouTube wanted to achieve with this move. I find it hilarious that my homepage is empty now by Google’s own choice.

      • NekuSoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de
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        You can also use it to create your own “algorithm”.

        With Reddit I’ve always subscribed to each subreddit individually, sometimes adding filters like “/hot/?limit=10”, which only shows posts that reach the Top 10 posts in /hot. That way I wouldn’t miss any post in niche subs while being able to individually scale the amount of posts I get shown from the bigger subs.

        You can do the same here on Lemmy, although I still haven’t felt the need to configure it, since staying on top of /new is still doable.

        • TheGreenGolem@lemm.ee
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          Individual/custom feeds would be awesome here. If I remember correctly from github, they are coming.

      • spacecadet@lemm.ee
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        This is the reason why for me, I actually took it one step further and rebuilt a front end news site with Django and shared the link out with friends who are interested in the same topics, added a discussion feature. Essentially, I have a python script that runs and pulls RSS feed data. If the whole article isn’t included then it uses Asyncio, aiohttp, and Beautifulsoup to pull in the article. Dump all that to a Postgres instance then have Django run on top of it. It’s like deconstructing news to reconstruct it

      • jettrscga@lemmy.world
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        There’s still an algorithm and “like” system in that scenario: clicks. The news providers generate more content based on what was clicked most.

        Some sites are more objective in what they report on, but there’s still going to be biases in what you’re fed.

        In that regard, I’m not sure how different subscribing to certain communities is from subscribing to certain news outlets.

        • misk@sopuli.xyz
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          Clickbait is obviously an issue with many media outlets but given that you curate your RSS feeds you can just dump them. Once reddit died I made plenty of changes to my media diet. It left me with way less sources but I’m certain all I lost was low quality reporting and other kinds of outrage bait.

      • StenSaksTapir@feddit.dk
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        1 year ago

        I do kinda like the idea of some kind of curation, but I’d like the algorithm to be transparent to me, so that I can go in and see what’s been filtered out, for instance, and why.

        Some guy on Mastodon a while back was working on a service that’d give him a digest of daily posts he’d missed from his feed. I could see the value in something like that, as long as you control the algorithm yourself.

        I think I’m still stuck on the idea of a daily edition. A finite selection of post or articles and maybe a funny pages section too. Like a newspaper in the olden days.

    • tea@lemmy.today
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      What is Reddit if not a glorified collection of RSS feeds with comments?

      I went from Google Reader to Reddit. It scratched very much the same itch. I remember having quite the curated list of RSS feeds subscribed to. Still pissed that Google killed it.

      • evatronic@lemm.ee
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        We really just need a Reader replacement. I’m sure there is something out there I don’t know about.

        If not, perhaps I’ll make one and become a billionaire on the RSS bandwagon!

          • GeekFTW@kbin.social
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            Was about to say lol. Right in those last days/weeks of Google Reader, Feedly loudly stepped up and offered to help people import their data over and continue on right in the nick of time. I’d assume the majority of people who had been on Reader, who didn’t quit using feeds entirely, probably migrated to Feedly the day Reader shut down.

            • basskitten@lemmy.world
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              That’s what I did! Over time I stopped looking at Feedly though. I replaced it with Reddit and Twitter mainly. Now that those sites have become Pure Evil I switched over to Apple News. I already pay for the Plus thing as part of the family bundle so might as well use it. The “Following” tab works like a personally-curated RSS feed list. If you want an algorithmic approach, you can use the “Today” tab.

              The one main feature it’s still lacking that I really want is a pure chronological list of everything from my Following sources/topics. I sent them feedback so I’m sure it will show up any time in the next 5-15 years.

        • Wodge@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Inoreader has been my go to, or The Old Reader which is closer to Google Readers style.

        • kazerniel@lemmy.world
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          I used Feedly for many years, but recently switched to Newsblur, and I love that it lets me filter out posts by tags or keywords, finally don’t have to use external tools for it.

          • tea@lemmy.today
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            1 year ago

            Newsblur

            Trying this out now. It’s awesome. Might have found a new doomscrolling default…

        • tea@lemmy.today
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          Is Feedly still a thing and okay? I remember it being the stopgap between Google Reader and Reddit, however I’m not sure where it lies on the “free version is good enough” vs “completely gimped free version and the real product is the paid one”

          • Lorax@lemmy.ca
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            I’m using the free version and not missing the paid features!

            • Rambler@lemm.ee
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              Good luck, it’s kind of feature-rich so if you have any questions, feel free to ask. The dev is quite responsive (on Github) which is good.

    • DMmeYourNudes@lemmy.world
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      The comments are why most people go there. It’s the major differentiator from other social media platforms. Holding a conversation on Reddit is much clearer than any other site. If YouTube has comments like reddit it would be a very interesting change to a lot of content that goes on Reddit at the moment.

      • clearedtoland@lemmy.world
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        My immediate thought about Reddit. Sure I discover some things there but what I really enjoy is seeing people’s reaction and genuine discussion (the quality of which is much better on Lemmy).

        I’d love to use RSS but it feels rather lonely by comparison.

      • expatriado@lemmy.world
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        Among other problems, in youtube posters can delete comments, so when someone calls bullshit the poster can just delete, here that power is limited to moderators but you can still check deleted comments. Another thing is that thumbs down isnt visible, another useful information taken away. Comments are not structured in trees, and the list continues…

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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        I view it just as much through the lense of entertainment as I do an essential check on disinformation both in the framing used by the actual post as well as clearing through bots and other dirty tricks/bullshit in the comments.

        The one thing I will commend Twitter on is its introduction of “Context”. It can be shocking how misleading or disingenuous headlines can be when you give them even an inch sometimes

    • ChrisLicht@lemm.ee
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      One of my co-workers solely interacts with Reddit through RSS feeds, and has done that for years.

      • Paradox@lemdro.id
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        RSS is quasi-archival, so it can give you a listing of new content sorted chronologically with no other input. Even reddit’s /new feed cannot guarantee this.

      • code@lemmy.zip
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        i have lemmy for that. My rss feeds are extremely curated and very specific to want i know i want to read about,

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      If you used Reddit sorted as “new” exclusively, it would essentially be a collection of RSS feeds. But, what most people sort by “popular” or “hot” or “top” or something. Chronological sorting vs. algorithmic sorting is an absolutely key difference for RSS vs. other social feeds.

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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        Its arguably also how content is “curated” which, at some point, is helpful for different uses. Nothing is pure asset or liabillity, it depends on implementation and audience.

  • FauxPseudo @lemmy.world
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    Right after Reddit melted I dusted off feed the and updated all my RSS feeds.

    If you have any great RSS feeds to share, post them here.

      • FauxPseudo @lemmy.world
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        Here is my problem with that list: it is almost entirely general news feeds. If you subscribe the the first 20 you are going to see the same story 20 times. I’m looking for niche information that is curated. Slashdot, Science Based Medicine, Nature, Factcheck, Neurologica, that kind of stuff where it’s not the same stories covered by everyone else.

    • rubicon@lemmy.ca
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      I had never used it until the Reddit event. Then I looked up what RSS was and realized that that’s how I was using Reddit, so might as well just do it that way. It’s so much better.

  • glad_cat@lemmy.sdf.org
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    i would love it to return.

    RSS never died though, I have at least 50 web sites that I follow.

  • ren (a they/them)@lemmy.world
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    RSS is great for following blogs and sites of specific interests, like local sites, or sites about specific subjects. You get ALL the updates. For example. I live in Baltimore and have a bunch of local sites in my RSS reader.

    Reddit/Lemmy, on the other hand, is a more democratically human curated and upvoted aggregator so while it hits all the popular stuff beyond the topics you follow on RSS, it will miss a lot too.

    So I use both.

    Feedly for hundreds of sites of interest. And Reddit and now Lemmy for the rest.

    Good stuff!

    • PooCrafter93@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Good to see a fellow feedly user. I’m curious, have you subscribed for any of the premium feedly features and if so, would you say they are worth it?

      • ren (a they/them)@lemmy.world
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        no, been a freebie user since Google Readers died and honestly, for the way I use it, to pop on and scroll through the feed then clicking on some articles? I’ve never felt limited or like I needed to pay to do anything.

        • Unforeseen@sh.itjust.works
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          Same thing for me as well, I haven’t felt limited by anything in the free version. It’s great for things like hackernews and webcomics.

      • sylverstream@lemmy.nz
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        I am Feedly user as well, but use the FeedMe app on Android. I prefer that app over the Feedly one, it’s free, and I can add as many categories as I want whereas Feedly limits it to three or so in the free version :)

  • wason@lemmy.ninja
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    Unpopular opinion but I switched from RSS to Google News and Reddit / Lemmy for basically 2 things:

    I like the Google algorithm for news (guess that’s why it’s called that) it shows relevant news, especially local. When I subscribed to local news papers’ RSS, for example, they pump a lot of articles and the relevant news were difficult to spot. It still lags behind on tech news for instance.

    I switched to Reddit because of the community content: conversations. On RSS you get all the news and all that but it lacks the social aspect, people discussing an article, learning from others. This is why I’m still here.

    • Freeman@lemmy.pub
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      I use RSS for news mostly. And Reddit for conversation. And Reddit has been phased out for lemmy.

      That said, lemmy is still not populated quite enough for some of the more topic specific stuff. For example there’s gaming, but not game specific communities etc. I wish it had a bigger following.

      Lately I have found the news discussions here as toxic if not more toxic than Reddit. I’ve just resolved to not discussing news unless it’s with friends over beers Reddit just doesn’t have a mobile app so f it.

      • wason@lemmy.ninja
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        Yes, I like RSS for tech news but I still prefer to read a discussion on it.

    • delirium@lemmy.world
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      Kinda jealous tbh, I couldn’t get my Google news to actually work and it was 40% spam 40% clickbait 20% American news (and I live in Europe)

      • Lorela@lemmy.world
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        I only use Google Alerts and it’s absolute trash. You can set it to only give alerts for particular regions and it’s constantly giving me hits from India, USA, and Australia (I’m also in Europe!).

      • wason@lemmy.ninja
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        Yes, still get my share of spam, especially on politics, but other than that it works ok.

    • fraydabson@sopuli.xyz
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      There’s some good RSS feeds that break up into the content and comments. I love those because they remind me of Reddit and Lemmy. I think hackernews / ycombinator

  • fubo@lemmy.world
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    The big platforms have gotten a lot worse.

    Twitter went fascist.
    Canadians can’t share news articles on Facebook.
    Reddit self-owned.

      • fubo@lemmy.world
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        Well yes. When a monetary charge is imposed for doing some action, people may simply choose not to do that action anymore. Since the action was “as a big web site, publishing user-submitted links to news sites”, that’s what Facebook chose to stop doing.

  • Fleppensteyn@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    I used to rely on news feeds through Firefox until they suddenly removed this feature. I switched to an RSS reader but around the same time, a lot of websites started dropping their RSS feeds. I’m out of the loop of why this happened and it’s probably one reason I feel so bored being online nowadays

    • Molecular0079@lemmy.world
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      It’s because RSS doesn’t allow you to serve ads and every tech company right now is either feeling the squeeze or feeling the greed.

      • Fleppensteyn@feddit.nl
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        Feeds can be set up to just show part of the article so you’d still have to visit the site to read it all, which seems a better solution than losing the traffic completely. I’ve deleted many sites that just stopped their RSS at some point and I just kind of forgot about them.

        Also, why can’t sponsored texts be added to RSS? It seems to me this would be hard to block by adblockers (and I’ll probably unsubscribe, but still).

        • Molecular0079@lemmy.world
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          Modern ads aren’t simply bits of text or animated gifs anymore. They’re full tracking platforms that rely on analyzing a person’s usage in order to deliver them targeted ads. It’s much harder to do that over RSS.

    • Adalast@lemmy.world
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      I used to have a bunch of science and technology articles in Google Reader and tried to do a blog where I would look for possible synergies and connections. When Google shuttered it I tried to keep going on other readers but my ADHD struggled with the change and it turned into another hobby that fell to the wayside. Makes me sad because I was so much more informed then than I am now about a wide array of stuff.

      • Fleppensteyn@feddit.nl
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        I keep hearing about Google being part of the downfall but I honestly never heard of Google Reader until long after it got closed down. How was this different than other RSS readers?

        • basskitten@lemmy.world
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          Since it was completely server-hosted it was incredibly fast. You’d open it up and boom, everything all up to date. The search was fantastic. (Say what you will about Google but they’ve always been great at search. Very fast and very good results.) The site layout was clean and minimal. It was just a really good implementation. Of course they murdered it.

          If you used Gmail in the early days, and ever used something before it, you probably had a moment where you said “wow, this is what email should have been all along”. Reader was the same.

    • madthumbs@lemmy.world
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      When I ran a site, I dropped it because of the server load and lack of ad revenue from it. (My site was getting taken down by the host server, but probably mostly for another issue). That said, most sites seem to have a feed (though often hidden) and there are third parties that can make a feed for virtually any site.

    • learningduck@programming.dev
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      People who are looking for a good RSS client for their phone?

      People hoping that it would give a web page/post with a curated list of RSS URLs.

        • learningduck@programming.dev
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          please correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe that this graph included any search with RSS in your search query. Otherwise it works be useless as people rarely search for something with just a single word.

    • 5714@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      the subset of those who do not use a proper search engine who want to know what a RSS is.

      • coffee_poops@sh.itjust.works
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        Beyond that, though, who the fuck would use Google’s search popularity as a metric for the popularity of a technology. Those who use it aren’t searching for it all the time. OP is dumb.

        • bob@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          who the fuck would use Google’s search popularity as a metric for the popularity of a technology

          that’s been a leading indicator of popularity for a long time now.

        • 5714@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Search popularity is something like the first derivation (read: change in) popularity of a technology.

          Calling people dumb is ableist.

          • vodichar@lemmynsfw.com
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            Is there an alternative to saying somebody or something is dumb? Or that a choice was dumb? Genuinely asking. It just seems like it’s all ableist all the way down at that point, but I’ve not heard of dumb being called ableist before so am interested if there’s a better alternative? Short-sighted? Uninformed?

  • Scrof@sopuli.xyz
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    Most RSS feeds suck these days because sites just half ass those and put a link and 1 sentence inside, if even that.

    • Rambler@lemm.ee
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      If you’re not getting a full text feed for articles try changing your feed app (assuming android). I’m using handy News reader (flymm fork on F-droid). It retrives the full article text for all my feeds.

  • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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    Some of us are “hyped” about it because when RSS fell out of favor we lost some of the RSS feeds we were using. This forced some of us to go looking for alternatives because the sites that had RSS feeds and dropped them were no longer accessible that way. And given that we see less ads and have to deal with less algorithms this way, we enjoy using RSS. If it becomes relevant enough again maybe those sources that were lost will come back. To be fair that’s probably a pipe dream. But ease of use, and use case are definitely some of the reasons.

  • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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    You should not assume that the google trend for RSS is linked to the popularity of RSS feeds. Nowadays, techies uses the term, but it is somewhat hidden for a lot of people through aggregation services and other names (atom, feed, etc.).

    Contrary to the trend, there’s been a handful of people moving back to decentralized sites that supports it, and a lot of big sites never stopped supporting it. And it gets advertised as an alternative, even if not under the “rss” name.

    • happyhippo@feddit.it
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      1 year ago

      Inoreader for me

      Couldn’t live without RSS, they’re literally my #1 source of info/news/updates.

      It’s a no fuss that works so well, I don’t understand why anyone would prefer a Google feed or any other social media feed to get their updates.

      I’m in full control of the sources, no shady content pushed to me from other sources just for ad revenues.

    • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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      1 year ago

      Yup, Twitter was the awesome condensed RSS alternative with great short summaries by necessity that melted down.

  • LastYearsPumpkin@feddit.ch
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    1 year ago

    RSS is great for news, because you don’t get told what to think by a 3rd party algorithm, you aggregate news from trusted sites (multiple) and decide what to read.

    RSS also is extremely important for podcasts, that’s how it gets pushed down to your listening app (except for specific ones like Spotify and whatnot that host the content)

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      There’s always an “algorithm” that’s biasing things though.

      If you just grab the recent headlines from ABC, BBC or CBC in chronological order you’re still getting your feed biased by what news directors choosing is worth covering. With public broadcasters you’re hopefully getting less “clickbait” and more “this is important news the public needs”. But, even then, there’s going to be bias.

      • LastYearsPumpkin@feddit.ch
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        1 year ago

        A third party isn’t involved. An RSS feed pulls in the data from the source.

        My point is that you find a trusted news source and you don’t have Google, Facebook, Apple, or Xitter deciding what you should see.