RDF Rich Site Summary (RSS) (original) (raw)

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RDF Rich Site Summary (RSS)

RSS might stand for "Rich Site Summary," "RDF Site Summary," "Really Simple Syndication," or something else, depending upon the authority being asked. Since the RSS specification is not developed within any recognized SSO/SDO (as of 2007-04), it's not clear that any group has the moral authority to specify an official acronym expansion. On that point: contrast The Atom Syndication Format, approved by The Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) as IETF Standards Track Request for Comments (RFC) #4287.

The two major variants of RSS include an RDF-based specification (RSS version 0.9, 1.0) and a non-RDF XML specification (RSS versions 0.91, 0.92, 0.93, 0.94, 2.0). From the version 1.0 specification abstract: "RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF Specification and is extensible via XML-namespace and/or RDF based modularization." From the IETF Internet-Draft 'draft-nottingham-rss-media-type-00': "RSS is a lightweight, multipurpose, extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application. RSS is currently used for a number of applications, including news and other headline syndication, weblog syndication, and the propogation of software update lists. It is generally used for any situation when a machine-readable list of textual items and/or metadata about them needs to be distributed. There are a number of revisions of the RSS format defined, many of which are actively used..."

Note of 2007-04-28: False prediction made in 2004, since The Atom Syndication Format was approved in 2005, and the The Atom Publishing Protocol was nearing approval stage in 2007-04, but 'RSS' [non-RDF XML specification variant] stands at version 2.0.8, published August 12, 2006, hoping to be approved by an 'RSS Advisory Board' as version 2.0.9:

RSS TNG will probably (?) be Atom: see "Atom as the New XML-Based Web Publishing and Syndication Format." On June 16, 2004 the IETF announced the formation of an Atom Publishing Format and Protocol (atompub) Working Group in the IETF Applications Area.

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