
Rss Definition
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What Is RSS
RSS (most commonly expanded as "Really Simple Syndication") is a family of web feed formats used to publish frequently updated works—such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video-in a standardized format. An RSS document (which is called a "feed", "web feed", or "channel") includes full or summarized text, plus metadata such as publishing dates and authorship. Web feeds benefit publishers by letting them syndicate content automatically. They benefit readers who want to subscribe to timely updates from favored websites or to aggregate feeds from many sites into one place. RSS feeds can be read using software called an "RSS reader", "feed reader", or “aggregator”, which can be web-based, desktop-based, or mobile-device-based. A standardized XML file format allows the information to be published once and viewed by many different programs. The user subscribes to a feed by entering into the reader the feed's URL or by clicking an RSS icon in a web browser that initiates the subscription process. The RSS reader checks the user's subscribed feeds regularly for new work, downloads any updates that it finds, and provides a user interface to monitor and read the feeds.
RSS formats are specified using XML, a generic specification for the creation of data formats. Although RSS formats have evolved from as early as March 1999, it was between 2005 and 2006 when RSS gained widespread use, and its icon was decided upon by several major Web browsers.
RSS Formats
The RSS formats were preceded by several attempts at web syndication that did not achieve widespread popularity. The basic idea of restructuring information about websites goes back to as early as 1995, when Ramanathan V. Guha and others in Apple Computer's Advanced Technology Group developed the Meta Content Framwork. For a more detailed discussion of these early developments, see the history of web syndication technology.
RDF Site Summary, the first version of RSS, was created by Guha at
Nestscape in March 1999 for use on the My.Netscape.Com portal. This
version became known as RSS 0.9. In July 1999, Dan Libby of Netscape
produced a new version, RSS 0.91, which simplified the format by
removing RDF elements and incorporating elements from Dave Winer's
scripting News syndication format. Libby also renamed RSS "Rich Site
Summary" and outlined further development of the format in a "futures
document".
This would be Netscape's last participation in RSS development for eight
years. As RSS was being embraced by web publishers who wanted their
feeds to be used on My.Netscape.Com and other early RSS portals,
Netscape dropped RSS support from My.Netscape.Com in April 2001 during
new owner AOL's restructuring of the company, also removing
documentation and tools that supported the format.
Two entities emerged to fill the void, with neither Netscape's help nor
approval: The RSS-DEV Working Group and Winer, whose Userland Software
had published some of the first publishing tools outside of Netscape
that could read and write RSS.
Winer published a modified version of the RSS 0.91 specification on the
UserLand website, covering how it was being used in his company's
products, and claimed copyright to the document. A few months later,
UserLand filed a U.S. trademark registration for RSS, but failed to
respond to a USPTO trademark examiner's request and the request was
rejected in December 2001.
The RSS-DEV Working Group, a project whose members included Guha and
representatives of O'Reilly Media and Moreover, produced RSS 1.0 in
December 2000. This new version, which reclaimed the name RDF Site
Summary from RSS 0.9, reintroduced support for RDF and added XML
namespaces support, adopting elements from standard metadata
vocabularies such as Dublin Core.
In December 2000, Winer released RSS 0.92 a minor set of changes aside
from the introduction of the enclosure element, which permitted audio
files to be carried in RSS feeds and helped spark podcasting. He also
released drafts of RSS 0.93 and RSS 0.94 that were subsequently
withdrawn.
In September 2002, Winer released a major new version of the format, RSS
2.0, that redubbed its initials Really Simple Syndication. RSS 2.0
removed the type attribute added in the RSS 0.94 draft and added support
for namespaces. To preserve backward compatibility with RSS 0.92,
namespace support applies only to other content included within an RSS
2.0 feed, not the RSS 2.0 elements themselves. (Although other standards
such as Atom attempt to correct this limitation, RSS feeds are not
aggregated with other content often enough to shift the popularity from
RSS to other formats having full namespace support.)
Because neither Winer nor the RSS-DEV Working Group had Netscape's
involvement, they could not make an official claim on the RSS name or
format. This has fueled ongoing controversy in the syndication
development community as to which entity was the proper publisher of RSS.
One product of that contentious debate was the creation of an
alternative syndication format, Atom, that began in June 2003. The Atom
syndication format, whose creation was in part motivated by a desire to
get a clean start free of the issues surrounding RSS, has been adopted
as IETF Proposed Standard RFC 4287.
In July 2003, Winer and UserLand Software assigned the copyright of the
RSS 2.0 specification to Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet &
Society, where he had just begun a term as a visiting fellow. At the
same time, Winer launched the RSS Advisory Board with Brent Simmons and
Jon Udell, a group whose purpose was to maintain and publish the
specification and answer questions about the format.
In December 2005, the Microsoft Internet Explorer team and Outlook team
announced on their blogs that they were adopting the feed icon first
used in the Mozilla Firefox browser. A few months later, Opera Software
followed suit. [citation needed] This effectively made the orange
square with white radio waves the industry standard for RSS and Atom
feeds, replacing the large variety of icons and text that had been used
previously to identify syndication data.
In January 2006, Rogers Cadenhead relaunched the RSS Advisory Board
without Dave Winer's participation, with a stated desire to continue the
development of the RSS format and resolve ambiguities. In June 2007, the
board revised their version of the specification to confirm that
namespaces may extend core elements with namespace attributes, as
Microsoft has done in Internet Explorer 7. According to their view, a
difference of interpretation left publishers unsure of whether this was
permitted or forbidden.
RSS Versions
There are several
different versions of RSS, falling into two major branches (RDF and
2.*).
The RDF (or RSS 1.*) branch includes the following versions:
RSS 0.90 : was the original Netscape RSS version. This RSS
was called RDF Site Summary, but was based on an early working
draft of the RDF standard, and was not compatible with the final RDF
Recommendation.
RSS 0.91 : is the simplified RSS version released by
Netscape, and also the version number of the simplified version
originally championed by Dave Winer from Userland Software. The Netscape
version was now called Rich Site Summary; this was no longer an RDF
format, but was relatively easy to use.
RSS 0.92 : through 0.94 are expansions of the RSS
0.91 format, which are mostly compatible with each other and with Winer's version of RSS 0.91, but are not compatible with
RSS 0.90.
RSS 1.0 : is an open format by the RSS-DEV Working Group,
again standing for RDF Site Summary. RSS 1.0 is an RDF format like
RSS 0.90, but not fully compatible with it, since 1.0 is based on the
final RDF 1.0 Recommendation.
RSS 1.1 : is also an open format and is intended to update
and replace RSS 1.0. The specification is an independent draft not supported or endorsed in any way by the RSS-Dev Working Group
or any other organization.
The RSS 2.* : branch (initially UserLand, now Harvard) includes
the following versions:
RSS 2.0.1 : has the internal version number 2.0. RSS 2.0.1
was proclaimed to be "frozen", but still updated shortly after
release without changing the version number. RSS now
stood for Really Simple Syndication. The major change in this
version is an explicit extension mechanism using XML namespaces.
For the most part, later versions in each branch are backward-compatible
with earlier versions (aside from non-conformant RDF syntax in 0.90),
and both versions include properly documented extension mechanisms using
XML Namespaces, either directly (in the 2.* branch) or through RDF (in
the 1.* branch). Most syndication software supports both branches. “The
Myth of RSS Compatibility”, an article written in 2004 by RSS critic and
Atom advocate Mark Pilgrim, discusses RSS version compatibility issues
in more detail.
The extension mechanisms make it possible for each branch to track
innovations in the other. For example, the RSS 2.* branch was the first
to support enclosures, making it the current leading choice for
podcasting, and as of 2005 is the format supported for that use by
iTunes and other podcasting software; however, an enclosure extension is
now available for the RSS 1.* branch, mod_enclosure. Likewise, the RSS
2.* core specification does not support providing full-text in addition
to a synopsis, but the RSS 1.* markup can be (and often is) used as an
extension. There are also several common outside extension packages
available, including a new proposal from Microsoft for use in Internet
Explorer 7.
The most serious compatibility problem is with HTML markup. Userland's
RSS reader - generally considered as the reference implementation - did
not originally filter out HTML markup from feeds. As a result,
publishers began placing HTML markup into the titles and descriptions of
items in their RSS feeds. This behavior has become expected of readers,
to the point of becoming a de facto standard, though there is still some
inconsistency in how software handles this markup, particularly in
titles. The RSS 2.0 specification was later updated to include examples
of entity-encoded HTML; however, all prior plain text usages remain
valid.
As of January 2007, tracking data from
www.syndic8.com indicates that the three main versions of RSS in current
use are 0.91, 1.0, and 2.0. Of these, RSS 0.91 accounts for 13 percent
of worldwide RSS usage and RSS 2.0 for 67 percent, while RSS 1.0 has a
17 percent share. These figures, however, do not include usage of the
rival web feed format Atom. As of August 2008, the syndic8.com website
is indexing 546,069 total feeds, of which 86,496 were some dialect of
Atom and 438,102 were some dialect of RSS.
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