And in the first place RSS has no feedback-option, to get the whole twitter-experience and build up his echo chamber.
And an RSS feed was and still is a great way to deliver and receive messages/updates from someone's personal corner of the internet. I wish it were more fashionable. But part of the reason it's not fashionable is because it's not profitable, financially, socially, or politically.
Other issues include the technical barrier to getting started with a personal site, and discoverability. I'd like to see more federated search engines to solve the discoverability issue.
So yes, it could be an opportunity for RSS to shine, but it won't catch on.
https://nitter.net/search/rss?f=tweets&q=from%3Adarek_kay&e-...
https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/gi5syv/messages_fo...
https://gist.github.com/bitbug42/d70db35b600ddfe20723a9bf991...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FeedBurner?wprov=sfla1
As others have pointed out, web syndication is really cool but it is not a "service" in itself and there are much better mechanisms to build one.
RSS is way to communicate website updates and they need to be delivered to a special reader...
You can institute the character limit and be done with it. This would be mostly federated and everyone is more or less registered to the platform. Just a whole lot of integration.
Maybe block chain can be used to maintain the whole forum log in a distributed way. Someone run with this concept, what would make it work?
There’s also not the ability to have privacy of networks. Maybe you could generate a unique ID for everyone that follows you then only once they’re allowed access by you, publish to that feed. I’d want the ability to host and share my own content with people I know but not people I don’t.
Twitter is a social network.
Thing is, RSS is just a bit 'technical' for a lot, especially with Google shutting down Reader which (far from ideal) was a visible entry point (and Wave, which IMHO was a Twitter-killer). If there was an easy adoption where everyone has an RSS reader app and RSS feeds were heavily promoted just 1-click then yeah.
As a stereotypical early adopter of Twitter sitting on the toilet pondering life while Tweeting, the stereotype was indeed a thing, as was the blogosphere then in my niche. Twitter complimented that blogosphere with short posts and strong social bonds from those that might not have a blog. Now the blogosphere, I feel, may be coming back. And with that super potential for a product that makes self-hosting, blogging, short posts, following, following back ( avian mentioned https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webmention), super smooth and simple. But it's chicken-and-egg. I'm all for it and that's nothing to do with Trump.