It’s always good to be in control of your own content sources.

  • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Two major problems:

    1: very very few sites offer an rss feed anymore

    2: the ones that do either only offer the headline and then just a link to the web story, or if they give a full feed, inject ads into them, where you don’t have an adblocker to stop it

    I spent the better part of a month trying to curate an awesome rss feed and in the end, it’s still so actively hostile that it renders it’s barely usable

    Don’t get me wrong. I want rss to come back and be as usable as it was years ago. But it’s a shadow of what it used to be, and active hostile

    • eri@sopuli.xyz
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      2 years ago

      2: the ones that do either only offer the headline and then just a link to the web story, or if they give a full feed, inject ads into them, where you don’t have an adblocker to stop it

      Thunderbird mostly solves this since it has a built-in browser and uBlock.

      Agreed on 1) the lack of RSS feeds. Lemmy also has a problem that RSS feeds aren’t federated, so commenting on new posts is very clunky.

      • LaggyKar@programming.dev
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        2 years ago

        You can however subscribe to your home feed in Lemmy, just like on Reddit, in which case it takes you to the post on your instance. That’s the main function I lack in kbin.

    • PixTupy@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      This has been my experience as well this week. I’m so disappointed, it’s mostly just clickbaits and ads.

    • LaggyKar@programming.dev
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      2 years ago

      very very few sites offer an rss feed anymore

      I’m gonna have to disagree. It’s mostly the big social medias that don’t have them, (Facebook, Instagram and Twitter) but other blogs and news sites usually do have them.

    • GadgeteerZA@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      I use a self-hosted service called Full-Text RSS Feeds, to which my feed reader connects, and then it gets the full text instead of limited RSS text feed.

      It’s also worth using an RSS feed detector browser extension, because although sites don’t advertise RSS (or they don’t know what it is), often there are still active RSS feeds.