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Web feed

A web feed is an XML-based document which contains content items, often summaries of stories or weblog posts with web links to longer versions. Weblogs and news website are common sources for web feeds, but feeds are also used to deliver structured information ranging from weather data to top ten lists of hit tunes. While RSS (file format) is by far the most common term, the generic web feed terminology is sometimes used by writers hoping to make the concept clear to novice users, and by advocates of non-RSS feed formats.

The terms publishing a feed and syndication are used to describe making available a feed for an information source, such as a blog. Like syndicated print newspaper features or broadcast programs, web feed contents may be shared and republished by other web sites. (For that reason, one popular definition of RSS is Really Simple Syndication.)

More often, feeds are subscribed to directly by users of online services or subscription readers called aggregator, which combine the contents of multiple web feeds for display on a single screen or series of screens.

Web feeds are designed to be machine readable, so there is no requirement that they be destined only for human readers. For example, business partners could use web feeds to exchange sales data or other information without any human intervention.

Web feeds are most commonly found in the RSS (file format), Resource Description Framework, or Atom (standard) formats.