Really Simple Syndication (RSS), the first information distribution protocol that saw massive adoption across the internet, is all set to take on Web3 with a decentralized information processing protocol called RSS3.
In a technical white paper released on Monday, RSS3 laid out plans for taking its popular internet feed update to Web3. RSS3 would offer every entity an RSS3 file that will act as source data and be updated continuously. The source data file then can be used as an aggregation of all the cyber activities, which can then be used to build out social media, content networks, games and other data-driven applications. The source data will have control over what information to broadcast and what to keep private.
RSS is a feed file containing a summary of a website’s updates, usually in a list of articles with hyperlinks. These feed files were meant to be decentralized and have played a key role in exchanging information across the internet. However, the monopoly of centralized web hosting services providers has led to the creation of the decentralized RSS3.
Related: Decentralized technology will end the Web3 privacy conundrum
The white paper noted that building a decentralized information processing protocol from scratch was quite a complex task and might take another six to eight months to build RSS3 nodes. The developers are in the process of building a decentralized autonomous organization system as well but believe a true decentralization will take time.
The development team has partnered with Ethereum, Arweave, Polygon, Binance Smart Chain, Arbitrum, Avalanche, Flow and xDai Chain to roll out the protocol across various decentralized networks.
The team behind the decentralized protocol has closed two funding rounds until now that saw participation from the likes of Coinbase Ventures, Dapper Labs, Dragonfly Capital, Fabric Ventures and several others.