HACKER Q&A
📣 militanz

Is RSS Still Alive?


I read recently a post here in HN about this topic but I can't find it anymore so I'm writing here my thoughts.

Recently, I started a hobby project in Rust that collects some news from several websites and creates me a weekly digest.

Since I'm making it for fun I started developing a scraper.

However, one simpler option was to use the websites' RSS feed. So, I looked for them as well but few websites have them.

Now, with the advent of Agentic AI they seem to be an old fashioned way that is needed anymore.

What do you think?


  👤 torunar Accepted Answer ✓
> Now, with the advent of Agentic AI

Why having an easy way to organise a data feed that will work even on cheapest clients and servers, when you can simply boil a tank of water to get a half-assed hallucination loosely based on the source, right?

I have seen people trying to bury RSS for the past 15 years — didn’t happen yet. It is still widely used by blog enthusiasts — that’s basically how I get information about new posts from my favourite old-tech authors.


👤 johnofthesea
> So, I looked for them as well but few websites have them.

This is a bit surprising for me. I've just randomly checked news: BBC, Guardian, Norwegian NRK - all had RSS. But I'm not checking news that much so not sure about others. Mastodon and BlueSky are also providing RSS. I guess walled garden ones like Instagram/Twitter don't?

My RSS reader is subscribed to:

- one Youtube channel

- several blogs (most blogs do have RSS, for example Wordpress provide it by default)

- Hacker News (few keyword-based feeds)

- Gitlab and Codeberg projects (haven't checked Github, because I need to be logged there).

- podcasts (podcasts are basically just RSS)

- few Mobilizon sites for events

- OpenStreetMap QA tool that check my edits

- subreddits

Maybe in general, you are right, I know just my bubble and even there are few sites without RSS (like Bandcamp).


👤 aebtebeten
I saw your Ask HN via RSS

👤 ZuoCen_Liu
RSS isn't just alive; it's the only remaining protocol for deterministic content delivery. There is a fundamental philosophical divide between RSS and the current AI-driven wave that people often miss: RSS is a Push system: If I subscribe to a source, I get 100% of the signal. The 'algorithm' is my own intent. AI is a Filtering system: AI is probabilistic. Its entire job is to guess what I want, which by definition means it creates a 'lossy' stream. People claim AI can 'replace' RSS by summarizing my interests, but AI will never be able to provide the certainty of a feed. I don't want an AI to 'guess' which security advisory or niche technical blog post I should read today; I want the raw signal that I explicitly requested. As long as there are professionals who value information completeness over algorithmic convenience, RSS (or its successor) will be a hard requirement. You can't replace a pipe with a concierge.

👤 DemocracyFTW2
Humans in general are overrated and not needed anymore.

👤 hotbit9
I use SimpleRSS Push on iPhone which have push notifications. It's old but works for me.

👤 JohnFen
It's very much alive. It's the primary way I keep up with sites on the web. One thing to keep in mind is that a lot of websites have RSS feeds but don't advertise them or offer an obvious link, but are discoverable by looking at the site's page source.

> Now, with the advent of Agentic AI they seem to be an old fashioned way that is needed anymore.

One of the main reasons I use RSS is to assemble a news feed that I read. It's hard to see how Agentic AI can improve on that.