Molly White's Citation Needed - Curate your own newspaper with RSS
Episode Date: July 31, 2025Escape newsletter inbox chaos and algorithmic surveillance by building your own enshittification-proof newspaper from the writers you already read. Originally published on July 31, 2025....
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I'm Molly White, and you're listening to the audio feed for the citation-needed newsletter.
You can see the text version of the newsletter online at citation-needed.news.
Curate your own newspaper with RSS.
Escape newsletter inbox chaos and algorithmic surveillance by building your own
insidification-proof newspaper from the writers you already read.
This issue was originally published on July 31st, 2025.
Last week, both The Verge and Wired announced major newsletter strategies.
Wired writes of a, quote, traffic apocalypse, where, quote, platforms on which outlets like Wired
used to connect with readers, listeners, and viewers are failing in real time.
The Verge describes Google Zero, the moment when the dwindling supply of visitors from Google Search
completely dries up.
Traffic to news sites from social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter,
has atrophied, as those services limit links to external sites to keep users locked in.
Google Search's excerpts, and more recently, AI overviews have satisfied users' questions
before they click on the article that actually provided the information.
Some have abandoned search altogether for chat GPT or other chatbot LLMs that summarize
journalists work with varying degrees of accuracy, often without linking or even mentioning
the source.
These intermediary platforms between news organizations and readers are undergoing a type of predictable decay,
Corey Doctoro calls in shittification. As executives twiddle the knobs to extract ever more profits from their user base,
things worsen for people on both sides of the consumer-producer relationship.
Readers no longer see news articles from the journalists they chose to follow on Twitter,
as the site down ranks any posts that link off-site. When they search a news article,
on Google, they're bombarded with error-ridden AI facsimiles before reaching the higher-quality
underlying work.
Producers who once relied on social media and search engines to drive visits are losing
traffic as platforms embrace a vampiric strategy, rip off others' work while expecting high-quality
journalism to magically continue to appear, even as journalists are starved of audience and
revenue. The newsletter strategy aims to bypass these rapidly insidifying intermediaries and instead
establish more direct relationships with subscribers. Quote, I don't intend to ever rely on someone else's
distribution ever again, wrote Verge editor-in-chief Nilai Patel on Blue Sky. Although email has undergone
some incitification of its own, its fundamental nature as a protocol rather than a platform,
has provided one essential prophylactic to inshidification, the escape hatch.
If your email provider suddenly inserted ads two sentences in to every email,
you could easily switch providers and still receive emails from everyone you previously emailed.
As a result, email has become a go-to refuge for news outlets fleeing their abusive relationships
with deeply inshittified platforms they grew reliant upon.
But the surge in newsletters has been overwhelming.
Whether it's writers like me who've never worked in a traditional newsroom, journalists who've left or been laid off from traditional jobs, or established newsrooms entering the newsletter business, there's a newsletter around every corner.
Instead of subscribing to a single newspaper for columns and articles by a dozen journalists, now you have a dozen separate newsletter subscriptions, with articles appearing haphazardly in your email inbox amid bills, business communications, marketing spam, order confirmations, and
two-factor authentication codes.
Even as a newsletter writer myself, I sometimes miss the newspaper.
Sure, maybe half of the articles I paid for were deeply uninteresting to me,
and sure, the executive overlords and editorial teams of the one-time titans of journalism
seem to be in a competition to see who can most eagerly defend fascism.
But hey, at least I could choose when to read the news,
go to the newspaper and get my fill, and then put it away.
No pings in the middle of my workday, pulling my focus away from my writing,
no notifications during my planned relaxation time, alerting me to some new horror.
No threats to my inbox zero, requiring me to choose between staring neurotically at the unread emails notification,
or marking an email as read only to lose it forever.
Maybe there was something to be said for the newspaper.
And increasingly, your reading is spying on you in a way a print newspaper never could,
with websites tracking when you click a link or scroll down the page,
and even email newsletters tracking when you open an email.
or visit a link. Apps like Substack collect data about your reading to show you an algorithmic
feed, ostensibly to grow the Substack network and drive new subscribers to writers hoping to build
a following. In practice, these mechanics in turn drive writers to try to please the algorithms,
writing what gets the most clicks and ranks them higher in the recommendation system.
Independent thinking and creativity often get sideline to click-chasing.
What if you could take all your favorite newsletters?
the data collection and curate your own newspaper. It could include independent journalists,
bloggers, mainstream media, worker-owned media collectives, and just about anyone else who publishes
online. Even podcast episodes, videos from your favorite YouTube channels, and online forum posts
could slot in, too. Only the stuff you want to see, all in one place, ready to read at your
convenience. No email notifications interrupting your piece, unless you want them.
no pressure to read articles immediately.
Wouldn't that be nice?
Platforms like Substack recognize this appeal
and invite you to follow numerous writers in a tidy feed on their app.
But with Substack, you're limited to following only the writers you publish on that platform.
You're also at the mercy of their rapidly accelerating inshittification,
as they work to lock readers and writers into their product
while making the experience worse for both.
There's a more inshidification-proof option.
Meet RSS.
Perhaps you've heard of RSS.
It stands for really simple syndication,
and it allows websites like blogs,
newsletters, and news sites to make their content available in feeds
for outside services called RSS readers or feed readers.
Far from being the new hotness,
attracting glitzy feature stories in tech media
or billions in venture funding,
RSS has been around for 25 years.
Google Reader was once the most popular RSS reader,
and many, including me, were heartbroken by its shutdown in 2013.
A lot of people moved to centralized micro-blogging services like Twitter and stopped reading blogs.
But despite the loss of reader, RSS continued on, and many contemporary tools do similar,
even better jobs than the decade-old service.
In fact, you've almost certainly been using RSS without even knowing it,
because the entire podcast industry runs on it.
Many, if not most, websites publish an RSS feed.
Whereas you can only follow a Twitter user on Twitter or a substack writer in the substack app,
you can follow any website with an RSS feed in a feed reader.
When you open it, all your reading is neatly waiting for you in one place, like a morning
newspaper.
And RSS is more of a one-way street from a privacy perspective,
pushing writing out to you with less of your data flowing back to the publisher.
I've been heavily using RSS for over a decade, and it's a travesty more people aren't familiar with it.
Here's how to join me in the brave, new, old world of RSS.
First, choose an RSS reader.
Many good, free, and paid RSS readers exist, as web-based, desktop, or mobile apps.
I personally use and like Ina Reader.
I pay for a subscription, but it has a generous free tier.
I've also heard good things about News Blur, and for Apple users,
Net Newswire.
I no longer recommend Feedly.
Don't agonize over this decision too much.
RSS is a protocol, and switching feed readers later is pretty straightforward.
Do note that various RSS apps may themselves try to collect data about you, so check their
privacy policies.
As of writing, I know Reader collects some data on your reading activities, but does not
sell or share it with marketers.
Some tech-savvy people opt to self-host RSS feed readers like Fresh RSS for
maximum privacy and control. Then add your sites. Once you've selected a feed reader,
add the feeds you wish to follow. Most feed readers let you paste in a website's URL to find
available RSS feeds for you. Some websites have multiple RSS feeds like Wired, which allows you
to subscribe to a firehose of all articles or trim things down by subscribing separately
to specific topic feeds like science or cybersecurity. Put anything in there, a URL to your
favorite newsletter, like this one, or a traditional news publication you enjoy, a blog, a YouTube
channel, or even a mastodon or blue sky feed. If you need ideas, I publish several folders of my
feeds to my blog role. The OPML file can be imported into a feed reader to automatically subscribe to
all of the feeds I follow, but beware. These are some of my fire hose feeds and can be
overwhelming. I'd recommend starting small with just a few feeds you enjoy. Power users can even
subscribe to search results from search engines or other websites, making RSS a powerful tool for
research. Have you ever wondered how I keep up with cryptocurrency news? Besides the crypto
publications in my RSS reader, I have feeds for Google searches like cryptocurrency or
NFT and theft or hack or scam, and court listener searches on crypto-related keywords for newly
filed cases. Court listener provides a feed for every docket, so I even have a folder in my
RSS reader for ongoing court cases I'm tracking.
What about sites without RSS feeds?
One hiccup you may encounter is a website you love that doesn't provide an RSS feed.
I encounter these rarely, as many content management systems provide RSS feeds out of the box,
sometimes without writers realizing they're there.
But publishers sometimes need to enable RSS functionality, and some will happily do so if you
ask nicely.
I've successfully asked at least one newsletter writer I subscribe to to to
turn on their RSS feed on Beehive, which doesn't provide feeds by default, but can be made to do
so with a click. Some paywalled email newsletters lack RSS feeds due to subscription-gated feeds
not being universal, although they do exist, shout out to 404 media. This leaves writers with a choice
of exposing all of their paywalled writing for free on an RSS feed, or not offering a feed at all.
Fortunately, many RSS readers can ingest email newsletters, typically by generating a custom email
address for newsletters to be sent directly.
When that newsletter sends an email, it appears in your RSS reader alongside your normal feeds.
And if your RSS reader doesn't offer this service, there are third-party tools like Kill the
newsletter that can accomplish the same task.
Then read.
With your RSS reader configured, you now have your own custom newspaper, or several.
I heavily use the folder's functionality in my feed reader to create several custom newspapers for different purposes.
I have a subscriptions folder for all the newsletters and media outlets I pay to read,
and I usually read almost every entry.
A broader newsletters folder contains a wider array of writers,
and in that one, I read only the articles that interest me.
My news folder usually has thousands of unread articles, often from high-volume publishers like Wired,
and I skim through headlines without reading every article.
My food folder holds over 100 food blocks and I browse it for dinner ideas.
Some publishers provide full-text articles in their RSS feeds,
so you can read everything without leaving the reader.
Others publish only an excerpt, requiring you to click through to the website to read the page.
I often click through regardless, because I like reading articles as their web designers intended.
But on sites cluttered with ads and cookie banners,
a full-text RSS feed offers relief.
And for more privacy-minded readers,
reading articles in your RSS reader
can also reduce ad tracking,
click surveillance, and other privacy invasions.
Finally, support writers when possible.
The RSS feed can make it easier
to miss subscription prompts or donation requests
that appear on a website outside the content feed.
If you regularly read a writer or publication through RSS,
consider subscribing to their newsletter directly,
purchasing a paid subscription or making a one-time donation if accepted.
Many newsletters, including this one, allow you to sign up for a paid subscription and turn off email delivery
so you can support the writer financially while reading through your RSS reader and avoiding inbox clutter.
This is how I read most of my newsletters.
Escape in Shedification
Using RSS as a way to regain control over the information you read online.
Instead of letting platforms like Twitter or TikTok,
control what you see based on engagement metrics meant to prolong your time on the platform
and subject you to endless ads, you can subscribe only to the sources and writers you want to read.
Unlike in Shedified Social Networks, your RSS feed will give you exactly what you signed up to read.
No promoted posts, no algorithmic de-boasting for posts that dare to link to articles,
no rage bait from people you don't follow.
RSS offers readers and writers a path away from unrollable.
reliable, manipulative, and hostile platforms and intermediaries.
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.
Thanks for listening to this issue of the citation-needed newsletter.
If you would like to support my work with a free or pay-what-you-want subscription to the citation-needed
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