The sucky thing is that I've discovered that for every truly awesome story on Digg's front page, there's a whole bunch of useless Apple fanboy posts or choice articles about things like the pee shiver, some geek with a Firefox ATM card, and misleadingly labeled rant about why there are 2 pi in a circle. Since adding digg's feed to my Reader, I haven't yet been able to get below 100 unread articles. Like some demon Whac-a-Mole, it keeps sprouting stories I don't care about, burying the "important" feeds.
I discovered a bunch of my friends are now syndicating their blogs as Facebook notes, which is pretty convenient. I can just grab the master feed of friends' notes and add it to my Google Reader. Done. Since I
Then I decided, in a fit of optimistic democratic engagement, to "support" Barack Obama on Facebook. Like many candidates, his campaign manager posted a profile there showing his softer side (how many people can claim a musical palate ranging from Bach to Miles Davis to the Fugees?). The idea is people can express their support for a candidate, which shows up in their friends' Facebook stalker feeds (which are not, incidentally, available as RSS), which encourages other people to support him/her, and it spreads like a virus. Which is all well and good for Obama--he's managed to almost beat Hillary at fundraising by getting a stunning 100,000 individual donors.
The problem, though, is Facebook decided he was my friend. And as such, I now get "his" notes all over my friends feed. At least twice a day now. They're not even interesting notes either--I know he's not really logging into Facebook and posting them, it's syndicated from some blog maintained by one of his campaign managers.
I like this guy. I want him to be President. Barring any dramatic revelations 'tween now and the primary he's got my vote. But I don't want to hear about the 35-year-old legal assistant from Houston, Texas who decided to vote for Obama. I don't care.
RSS could be the next frontier for spam. Just wait.
1 comment:
[...] michellelentz wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerpt(This comes just over 3 years after they opened a limited beta test of “AdSense for Feeds“, a program started before their acquisition of FeedBurner). For publishers that understand the value of syndicating their content but that have … [...]
Post a Comment