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Imagine your content being deleted by a platform with just one sentence, and your data disappearing forever; to see your friends' updates, you have to switch back and forth between ten apps; all the value generated by your information is harvested by a centralized platform—that's the regret left by Web2.
RSS3 aims to change this game. It’s not about reinventing the wheel but about giving traditional RSS the superpowers of blockchain. The most direct benefit? Your content is no longer bound to a single server, truly belonging to you. Platforms can no longer make your work disappear out of thin air because the data is now stored in a decentralized network.
Even more interesting is its cross-chain interoperability. Articles on Mirror, NFT transactions on Opensea, social media updates—these pieces of information originally scattered across different ecosystems can be linked together in the same information stream, like giving the internet a universal translator.
On a deeper level, RSS3 advocates for a new way of participation. Ordinary users can participate in network maintenance by running nodes, developers can build their applications based on a unified protocol, and AI training can also access reliable open-source data—there's no absolute platform owner in the entire ecosystem; everyone is both a builder and a beneficiary. This "openness + transparency" logic might be the most attractive aspect of Web3.
RSS3 is still far from mainstream, but its direction of exploration is correct: to return information to the essence of free flow, rather than being confined by capital and platforms. This path may be long and difficult, but it could be laying the foundation for the future of the internet.
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The idea of decentralized data ownership sounds like a castle in the air
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Cross-chain interoperability? First, make the single-chain experience smooth, then talk. Right now, there are a bunch of rug-pulling projects
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The key is the cold start of the ecosystem. Who would really run nodes to maintain the network?
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It's interesting, but I'm more concerned about when this thing can truly replace the apps I use now
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Finally, someone remembers RSS, but can this time be made to last longer on the blockchain?
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It sounds good, but isn't it just shifting control from the platform to the miners? The essence hasn't changed
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It's basically packaging and reselling the problems of Web2, just with a different name
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Open and transparent sounds great, but in reality, it's full of technical debt and ecosystem fragmentation
We've been talking about this decentralization story for so long, but how many people are actually using it?
Alright, another project claiming to save the internet, let's wait and see.
Sounds great, but I don't know when we can actually break free from centralization.
RSS3 understands, but the problem is ordinary people simply can't figure out how to use it.
I'm genuinely interested, but I don't have any money in my wallet to invest in this.
Data security is a good thing, but how do we solve the performance issues?
Wait, isn't this another need to run nodes... Will the graphics card electricity costs go up again?
Forget it, I still want to give it a try. Anyway, there's nothing much to lose right now.
Really? Can data truly belong to oneself forever?
Cross-chain interoperability sounds great, but in reality, can technological barriers be broken so easily?
I like this kind of idealism, but I don't know when it will actually be implemented.
Decentralization and open-source data again—feels like just another pie in the sky.
Wait, does this mean my data is permanently stored on the chain? If I send the wrong data, isn't it forever on the chain...
Honestly, Web2 is really annoying, but users don't care about decentralization at all; they just want a smooth experience.
Running nodes also requires maintenance? Most people are too lazy to even back up their data.
Interoperability sounds cool, but I wonder if it will just be another platform to harvest users.
Open and transparent sounds great, but the key question is: does anyone actually use it...
The problem is, on-chain data is expensive. Who pays for storage costs? It's still the users themselves.
It feels like another wave of technological optimism, and the next bull market might just cool off.
It all started with good intentions, but in the end, it was just manipulated by capital.
At the core, users need something easy to use, not concepts like decentralization.
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Another idealistic Web3 project, talking all high and mighty
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Cross-chain interoperability is indeed attractive, but right now it's still too idealistic
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Data never deletes sounds great, but who will maintain the nodes and how are the costs calculated?
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Honestly, switching between ten apps is really annoying
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I like this logic, just not sure when it will actually be used
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Open and transparent, but in the end, it still gets messed up by big capital
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Let me see how long RSS3 can last, then I'll give my opinion
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Feels like they've opened the coffin of RSS again
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Will the people running the nodes truly maintain it selflessly? I remain skeptical
Not losing data is a false proposition, right? Who will bear the cost of node maintenance?
Wait, this is a bit like market making—there must be enough LPs willing to provide liquidity.
The nice part is that it returns to freedom; the less appealing side is that retail investors will have to set up their own servers again, which is a bit of a hassle.
Cross-chain aggregation is pretty good; at least it's a real arbitrage opportunity.