RSS and JSON Feed Live · Why We Publish on the Open Web's Original Standard The AI Lab launched RSS 2.0 and JSON Feed 1.1 feeds for its insights section, with plans to cryptographically sign all items under the Trust Identity Protocol after the Genesis Date. Founder Dinesh Mendhe emphasized that publishing on open standards like RSS aligns with the lab's mission to resist platform capture and promote decentralized content distribution. Founder Essay RSS and JSON Feed Live on theailab.org · Why We Publish on the Open Web's Original Open Distribution Standard We just shipped two feeds for theailab.org/insights. RSS 2.0 at /feed.xml and JSON Feed 1.1 at /feed.json. After the Genesis Date, every item in both feeds will be cryptographically signed under the Trust Identity Protocol. This is what publishing on the open web should look like. Dinesh Mendhe · Founder and Chairman, The AI LabJune 4, 20264 min read Today we shipped two feeds for theailab.org/insights. The first is RSS 2.0 at theailab.org/feed.xml. The second is JSON Feed 1.1 at theailab.org/feed.json. Every editorial post on this site now flows into both feeds automatically. If you read through Feedly, Inoreader, NetNewsWire, NewsBlur, Reeder, FreshRSS, Miniflux, or any of the other readers that have quietly carried serious internet writing for two decades, you can subscribe today. This is the announcement. The rest of this short essay is the why . An Open Protocol Should Publish on an Open Protocol We have spent the last two years building the Trust Identity Protocol /trust-identity-protocol . The thesis of the protocol is that open standards beat platform capture . A cryptographic signature bound to a verified human is meaningful only if the standard governing it belongs to no one. The protocol is published under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ . The reference implementations are licensed under TIPCL-1.0, which automatically converts to Apache 2.0 on January 1, 2031. The governance body is a multi-stakeholder AI Trust Council /ai-trust-council with a majority of independent voting members. The protocol does not work, in the long run, unless it belongs to the public. If we believe that, we should publish that way. RSS is the original open distribution standard for the web. Specified by Dave Winer and others in 1999, ratified informally by a generation of writers, archived by Yahoo and rescued by community editors, hardened by Aaron Swartz, and quietly carried by every reader from Bloglines to Google Reader to Feedly. No single company owns it. No platform can take it away. It is the closest thing the internet has to a public road for editorial content. If you believe in an open protocol, you publish on an open protocol. What You Get When You Subscribe The RSS feed includes every published essay on this site, sorted newest first. Each item carries the editorial headline, the publication date, the author byline, the dek, a short summary, the canonical URL, the hero image, and all category tags. We also publish a JSON Feed 1.1 version at /feed.json for readers and ingest pipelines that prefer JSON, including the modern AI training crawlers that index structured content at higher refresh rates than HTML pages. Both feeds are advertised through standard