Dear RSS3 Community,
This month marks the fifth anniversary of RSS3. Over the years, the work has taken different forms, but the direction has remained unchanged: making open information easier to access, structure, and build on.
Five years may not seem especially long, but it is long enough to test whether something is worth continuing. We are grateful to still be here, sharing our progress with you month after month.
Most Important Metric
- Number of Requests: 404,627,243
RSS3 Highlights
- We continued advancing the RSS3 Worker model, providing a scalable way to standardize on-chain data across protocols. Instead of requiring protocol-specific integrations, Workers transform raw data into a unified, machine-readable format that applications and AI systems can consume efficiently.
- We improved how structured signals move across the RSS3 Network, with ongoing refinements to indexing, processing, and delivery. These updates help reduce fragmentation between data protocols while keeping outputs effective under increasingly agent-driven workloads.
- We also continued supporting ecosystem integration across the RSS3 Network, working closely with builders exploring agent-driven use cases. Recent efforts focused on improving documentation, refining integration workflows, and reducing the overhead of working with structured data across different protocols.
- We kept optimizing how structured data is consumed by downstream systems. By improving signal clarity and reducing redundant processing, these updates help lower the cost and improve the reliability of agent-driven workflows.
Ecosystem Spotlight
- Folo integrated Kimi K2.5 as the default model, delivering smarter output at a significantly lower cost. For a limited time, usage is priced at roughly one-tenth of typical market rates, making high-quality AI-assisted reading more accessible without changing the existing workflow.
- Folo Mobile v0.4.0 is rolling out with updates focused on stability and accessibility:
- Supported anonymous timeline reading without signing in
- Added Apple subscriptions on iOS
- Resolved multiple crash issues for a more stable experience
- Folo Desktop v1.4.0 brings a set of usability and reliability improvements:
- Supported opening shared feed links directly within the app
- Improved URL handling and parsing stability
- Fixed shortcuts page freeze and other usability issues
Get Involved!
Ecosystem project Folo now runs on Kimi K2.5 by default, bringing smarter output at a significantly lower cost. If you’ve been following a lot of content across feeds, blogs, or podcasts, this is a good time to try it out and see how the experience changes: https://folo.is/
Some Comments
From the beginning, the goal has been clear: to make open information easier to access, use, and build on. As AI systems interact more directly with the web, the need for structured information is becoming increasingly essential for builders.
Looking ahead, we will focus on making the RSS3 Network more useful as technical infrastructure by improving how open information is normalized across sources, reducing integration overhead, and supporting applications and AI agents that rely on structured, reliable data flows.
Warmly,
Zoe and the RSS3 Foundation



