Newsletter: In a media landscape dominated by algorithmic feeds that aim to manipulate and extract, sometimes the most radical thing you can do is choose to read what you want, when you want, without anyone watching over your shoulder.

Here’s how to use #RSS.

https://www.citationneeded.news/curate-with-rss/

Curate your own newspaper with RSS

Escape newsletter inbox chaos and algorithmic surveillance by building your own enshittification-proof newspaper from the writers you already read

Citation Needed
News organizations are increasingly launching newsletters in hopes of building a more direct relationship with readers, as traffic from platforms they once relied on — like social media and Google Search — continues to shrink.

But the explosion in newsletters is overwhelming as a reader. Instead of one paper with a dozen writers, you’ve got a dozen newsletters scattered across your inbox.

What if you could curate your own custom newspaper? All your favorite writers, no spam, no surveillance.

Although I regularly read about “the death of RSS”, RSS is still alive and well, and I’ve been using it for more than a decade. Here’s how you can too.

#RSS

1. Choose an RSS reader. I use Inoreader, but there are a bunch of options out there (free and paid, mobile/web/desktop). Switching between them is pretty easy, so you don’t have to agonize over this too much.

#RSS

2. Add your sites. Try searching for feeds on the newsletters/blogs/websites you read the most (like Citation Needed!) You can even put in YouTube channels, or Mastodon or BlueSky feeds.

If you need ideas, I publish some of my blogroll: https://mollywhite.net/blogroll/

#RSS

Some websites don’t publish RSS feeds — often paywalled websites or newsletters. Increasingly, RSS readers are incorporating features that allow you to send newsletters to your feed reader via email, and there are also services like Kill the Newsletter that can do this for you.

#RSS

3. Read! As you use RSS more, you can make different “newspapers” for different purposes.

#RSS

And don’t forget to support writers — whose subscription reminders may be less noticeable in RSS feeds. Most newsletters allow you to pay for a subscription but disable email delivery, if you (like me) prefer to read in your RSS reader rather than your email client.

#RSS

RSS offers readers and writers a path away from unreliable, manipulative, and hostile platforms and intermediaries.

#RSS

Citation Needed has a full-text RSS feed regardless of whether you subscribe, so consider adding it to your feed reader! https://citationneeded.news/rss/

And consider signing up for a pay-what-you-want subscription to help me continue this work. https://www.citationneeded.news/signup/

#RSS

@molly0xfff Thanks Molly! I remember NetNewsWire from back in the day but recently I’ve been signing up for lots of newsletters (including yours). As my inbox fills up and as I want to stop supporting anything on Substack, this was a timely post to prompt me to download an RSS reader and organize what I read.
@gadgetgav @molly0xfff @NetNewsWire is still around! I use it with FreshRSS running on my own server for the best of both worlds. :)
@rasterweb @molly0xfff @NetNewsWire I was today years old when I discovered that!😀 Just downloaded it and will move my newsletters over to it over the next day or so.

@rasterweb
So, here's what I've been looking for ever since ditching Opera 12 as e-mail/RSS client:

A local RSS client (easy, most e-mail clients will do, plus a lot of browser extensions) which stores its data on what's been read or not in one handy directory that can be easily synced across all my devices (using e.g. syncthing, which I have going), in such a way that it works on bith Linux and Android.

The beauty of RSS is that no 3rd party needs to know what I'm reading, and having an online RSS aggregator kind of defeats that purpose unless I self-host, which is a fairly high barrier to entry if you ask me. I could deal with it but I'd prefer not to.

@gadgetgav @molly0xfff @NetNewsWire