The use case I have in mind: say for example, I read a lot of articles about a certain topic, such as Linux or chemistry or whatever. I want to combine the articles I write into a singular feed, and for others to be able to follow it. Call it “Alex’s Linux Feed”.

Another use case: Suppose I follow a news source (like washington post), but maybe I dont like the formatting of their feed. Maybe it does not have the full article, or maybe it is not organized right (sports news is mixed with political news, and I want to separate them right). So I create my own feed where I organize those same posts better.

The reason this would be a platform because the user should not be burdened with hosting it (even if it is not difficult), and it should be searchable.

Is there any platform like this of user created RSS feeds?

    • Draconic NEO@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      I mean yeah, that applies with any service that uses an RSS feed. RSS is just a syndication protocol, it’s meant to only broadcast. If you want to contribute, you’ll need to be a part of the service which is broadcasting i.e. Lemmy or Mastodon.

    • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Well yes that’s true. To publish yes. But not to follow etc. About the only other option. Considering how obscure RSS is unfortunately. Is the old-fashioned way. Get a free linode basic server. Edit the RSS and upload it to the server. Someone might be able to slap together a basic GUI to handle the simple XML. Appending to the top and then sending it via FTP. But then that’s just a lot of work to not use Lemmy.

      I may be mistaken, but I think most activity pub services offer RSS. Kbin/Mbin Mastodon etc.

    • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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      9 days ago

      Yes, but you don’t need to use Lemmy or go to Lemmy to read items of the feed (if said item is a link outside lemmy, ofc). It’s called a link aggregator for a reason.