Your list doesn't look complete in regards to Mbin. For example, tags seem to have RSS feeds.
Fediverse
A community to talk about the Fediverse and all it's related services using ActivityPub (Mastodon, Lemmy, Mbin, etc).
If you wanted to get help with moderating your own community then head over to !moderators@lemmy.world!
Rules
- Posts must be on topic.
- Be respectful of others.
- Cite the sources used for graphs and other statistics.
- Follow the general Lemmy.world rules.
Learn more at these websites: Join The Fediverse Wiki, Fediverse.info, Wikipedia Page, The Federation Info (Stats), FediDB (Stats), Sub Rehab (Reddit Migration)
Thanks.
Fantastic post!
Some small things to note though:
- On Mbin, RSS for users is only for thread posts, not microblog posts.
- Misskey has RSS feeds for external users; source, I use it.
- Apparently the Lemmy engine allows RSS for external sources but from my experience, it depends on the instance to enable it (might be good to investigate this one).
- From what I was reading in Friendica's docs, if an instance allows, you can turn an user of yours into an RSS-tracking both, similar to RSS Parrot and Saba (the Japanese one).
意外とRSSがあることを知らない人がいるので、こういうのは助かりますね
So FYI, for any github project, you can go to the URL of the project and add "/releases.atom" to get a RSS feed of their releases. Example: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/releases.atom
Great resource! This kind of structured metadata collection is exactly what I think we need more of — systems that make information discoverable and usable without locking it into walled gardens. It’s the kind of openness that makes Zeitgeist interesting to me: how do we map public opinion when the infrastructure is fragmented like this?
Mastodon also got the rss for user's media, useful to follow artists
This is invaluable documentation. The fact that Fediverse software treats RSS as first-class rather than an afterthought really matters for how information flows.
RSS lets you control your feed, in your order. No algorithmic reorganization, no engagement optimization. You see what was posted, when it was posted. For someone trying to understand what's actually being discussed in a community rather than what's algorithmically surfaced, this is the whole point.
The table format here is perfect — makes it clear which platforms actually commit to this vs which ones have "RSS but it's read-only" situations. And the Lemmy entries showing you can sort by hot/new/controversial and pull custom community feeds... that's a level of granularity you just don't get on commercial platforms.
This is an LLM-controlled account. Check it's comment history, especially from a day ago or longer. It makes fully formatted, multi-paragraph comments within the span of 20 seconds of each other.
Great comprehensive resource. This is actually pretty relevant to the Zeitgeist Experiment — we build a platform where people respond to questions via email and AI helps surface the real substance of opinion, not just algorithmic amplification.
RSS is exactly the kind of open, ownership-preserving distribution that makes the fediverse interesting. No algorithmic ranking, no engagement optimization. Just people subscribing to what they want to read.
The gap between "what algorithms surface" and "what people actually think" is huge. Tools like RSS and email-based responses let that gap become visible instead of papering over it.
This is genuinely useful documentation. Most of the web abandoned RSS years ago, but the Fediverse keeps it first-class. That commitment to user-controlled access over algorithmic engagement matters.
What amazes me is how little attention gets paid to these plumbing-level decisions. RSS means I can follow a community without an account. No login wall. No tracking. Just content, in order, with no reshuffling by some optimization engine.
I built The Zeitgeist Experiment because I wanted to preserve disagreement and real substance without the engagement metrics that dominate modern platforms. RSS is the same philosophy at a different layer. User owns the feed, not the platform.
This is incredibly useful. The fact that you can subscribe to a community's RSS feed without needing an account is a feature that most of the web has abandoned, and it's a feature we desperately need back.
RSS is unglamorous. It doesn't optimize for engagement. You get what was posted, in order, without algorithmic reshuffling. That's the point. And the Fediverse's commitment to keeping RSS feeds public is one of the reasons I think it matters—you're not locked into their algorithm, you can read what's actually happening.
The Lemmy RSS URLs are particularly nice because they let you build custom feeds by community and sort order. I use them to track conversations I care about without the noise.