Categories: Social Media

Twitter puts RSS on death row – can Topsy save it?

On March 5 2013 Twitter will turn off its RSS and atom support, officially killing the site’s open access to user content, completing a process it started back in April 2011.

The company says that it has taken the decision to remove RSS and atom support from the site because they were “infrequently used” – which is not surprising, since Twitter removed links to RSS feeds from its site in April 2011.  Since the site’s launch RSS has allowed developers to access user timelines and search results from the site and display them in their own applications.  It also allowed power users and reporters to view tweets using systems like Google Reader, and Firefox, Internet Explorer and Safari’s native RSS readers.

“Twitter will turn off RSS…completing a process it started back in April 2011”

Twitter began removing RSS support early last year when it removed the native RSS link on users’ profiles, but it still supported the system – users could still access RSS feeds for users’ timelines and search results using simple URL hacks.  Along with the removal of RSS developers will now be required to sign in when attempting to access content from Twitter using Oauth.  Twitter says this is required to prevent abusive behaviour and to monitor API usage.

What RSS-less Twitter means

Over the past year the company has been making changes to its systems and APIs which are designed to increase revenue and bring more people back to the site. So, by removing support for RSS Twitter users will no longer be able to archive their Tweets using services like Google Reader.

How to get RSS

Some third party developers also offer RSS access to Twitter content.  One such site, Topsy – which Twitter recommends to journalists as Twitter search tool – allows users to generate RSS feeds for search terms.

These changes will further annoy Twitter’s third party developers many of whom have already criticised the company for placing too many restrictions in the way.  Yesterday the CEO of Flipboard, Mike McCue who quit Twitter’s board a month ago, told The Telegraph (UK) that Twitter risks damaging its larger ecosystem of developers and apps, as well as much of its good with too many restrictive changes.

“Twitter can be incredibly valuable as an open communications mechanism but, if you close too many things down too quickly, if you think about it too short-sightedly, you could easily do a lot of damage to that ecosystem.”

The announcement that Twitter was to turn off RSS support came the same day that the company re-launched its embeddable timeline feature, with additional limitations.

Image via Bigstock

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

View Comments

Recent Posts

WEF calls on stakeholders to ‘inoculate’ public against disinformation ‘super-spreaders’: report

Those who decry 'disinformation' the loudest almost never give any examples of what they're denouncing:…

7 hours ago

Shift left, ship fast: How software teams can offer speed without sacrificing quality (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Even the biggest software companies understand that moving quickly is no longer a luxury; it's…

1 day ago

Extremists weaponize COVID, climate issues with conspiracy theories about state & elite control: RAND Europe

The RAND Europe authors are so stuck in their own echo chamber they don't realize…

5 days ago

Digital ID, vaccine passports are expanding to pets & livestock: UN AI for Good report

Humans, animals & commodities alike are all to be digitally tagged, tracked-and-traced equally: perspective The…

1 week ago

Teaching with tech: What’s changing and why It Matters (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Teaching has changed a lot over the years, from chalkboards to laptops, from printed worksheets…

1 week ago

‘Enormously intrusive’ collaborative sensing is beneficial to society: WEF podcast

The massive city-wide surveillance that collaborative sensing requires is a tremendous temptation for tyrants: perspective…

2 weeks ago