RSS never tracked you
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@Daojoan the internet has changed significantly, now it the time to take it back!
Most of the old internet is still there, it's just been buried by the corporate web and largely ignored by smartfones.
What we need is a way to convince our friends and family to ditch their corporate theft-and-nudge-ware and pick up the old open protocols.
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@creatures @Daojoan anything that makes requests to a server makes you trackable, just like tracker pixels e.g. in emails. And then there's of course the RSS contents themselves, which again can contain resources upon resources - images, video, audio, external CSS I believe is also supported … it's basically just a webpage without JS. your user agent and especially IP address can still be used for tracking.
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RSS never tracked you.
Email never throttled you.
Blogs never begged for dopamine.
The old web wasn’t perfect.
But it was yours.♫ Welcome To The Internet
♫ Have a look around… ♪ -
@Andres they can have my RSS reader when they pry it from my cold dead hands
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RSS never tracked you.
Email never throttled you.
Blogs never begged for dopamine.
The old web wasn’t perfect.
But it was yours.@Daojoan May I use that quote in a talk?
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@creatures@plush.city @Daojoan@mastodon.social fetching an online resource means sending a request for it
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@creatures@plush.city @Daojoan@mastodon.social I guess? either way, by simply requesting a resource, they will have your IP address.
simply being subscribed to an RSS feed is already really good data for an ad agency, since it can correlate that IP address with some categories. So if for example you're subscribed to the rebble RSS feed, and google somehow gets access to that info (for example if they were to use google servers for the RSS service, or if they embed an image that is hosted on google servers), then you're more likely to see ads for smart watches on your home network. The RSS server will also over time be able to guess your awake hours based on when your RSS reader checks for new articles (If it automatically refreshes, e.g. hourly) and probably more that I'm not thinking of rn
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@creatures@plush.city @Daojoan@mastodon.social the topic of seeing ads in the first place is a different one
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@creatures@plush.city @Daojoan@mastodon.social …yes, that's the point
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@creatures@plush.city @Daojoan@mastodon.social tracking agencies are deceptively good at finding patterns in the noise
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@Daojoan I wish the major browsers would bring back built in RSS!
@scottwhat @Daojoan what if someone made alternative? like also newsfeeds but just in other format

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@Daojoan Hi everyone

Please post your top-3 RSS feeds as a reply to this comment

@sorenladegaard @Daojoan mostly one - wikipedia article of day 🤪
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@Daojoan Even these got ruined nowadays. RSS feeds often don't have the full article text. Email contains tracking pixels and links. "Blogs" have texts behind paywalls and cookie warnings. We need the old web back.
@forst @Daojoan I use two solutions for this more and more:
1. Some readers like NetNewsWire have a builtin readability mode. They take the URL of the RSS entry, run it through reader mode and present it as if it were the RSS entry itself. Works fantastic even on feeds that only push a URL and no text at all.
2. I coded a read-it-later service for myself that extracts entries and pushes them to a feed I subscribe to, it’s here: https://github.com/thefranke/rss-librarian -
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@forst @Daojoan I use two solutions for this more and more:
1. Some readers like NetNewsWire have a builtin readability mode. They take the URL of the RSS entry, run it through reader mode and present it as if it were the RSS entry itself. Works fantastic even on feeds that only push a URL and no text at all.
2. I coded a read-it-later service for myself that extracts entries and pushes them to a feed I subscribe to, it’s here: https://github.com/thefranke/rss-librarian@thefranke @Daojoan Didn't know about (1), that's brilliant, thanks!
I made some custom RSS exporters for myself as well for sites that don't have a feed

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RSS never tracked you.
Email never throttled you.
Blogs never begged for dopamine.
The old web wasn’t perfect.
But it was yours.@Daojoan rss can be injected tracking and so can emails (e.g. via a tracking image). outlook and gmail are really hostile to self-hosted email services. blogs can have ads and other anti-features.
at the very end, you don't really own domains and IPs; big companies rent them to you.
what matters is never what kind of tech you use, but rather how you use it and why. -
@thefranke @Daojoan Didn't know about (1), that's brilliant, thanks!
I made some custom RSS exporters for myself as well for sites that don't have a feed

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@thefranke @Daojoan Didn't know about (1), that's brilliant, thanks!
I made some custom RSS exporters for myself as well for sites that don't have a feed

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@thefranke @Daojoan I use NetNewsWire, and it also allows this per-feed, as it turned out. Immediately enabled on the offenders.