I wrote about who killed Google Reader because Reader’s shutdown felt like losing a whole way of using the web: the curation layer, the accidental social network, the daily habit. Matthew Guay, editor at Buttondown, is interested in the part that survived. His answer is blunt: nothing important died.
The feeds walked out intact: three million people moved to Feedly in two weeks, and the content never left the blogs. Guay’s point is that we were mourning the right thing—the curation layer, the accidental social network—at the wrong level of the stack: the aggregation service, not the open protocol underneath it.
Not an iota of data was lost, as the content that filled the feeds lived on individual blogs and websites. Google+ users wouldn’t be so lucky, six years later, when that network too was shuttered, taking with it their non-portable social graphs and ephemeral posts.
That contrast is the spine of the piece. Google+ and Google Reader died the same administrative death, both casualties of the same corporate pivot, but they died completely different technical deaths. Reader’s users lost a habit. Google+ users lost everything. The portability of the underlying protocol made the difference, and it’s why early RSS developer Dave Winer could be so clear-eyed about Reader’s shutdown at the time:
“I won’t miss it,” said early RSS developer Dave Winer more cantankerously—or, perhaps, more clear-eyedly—of Google Reader. “Never used the damn thing. Didn’t trust the idea of a big company like Google’s interests being so aligned with mine that I could trust them to get all my news.”
But that’s the thing about RSS. Winer didn’t need to love Reader for people to follow his writing there. And when it went away, those same readers could still follow him directly, could still read the words on his site that yesterday they’d read under Google’s auspices.
Designer and author Marcin Wichary picked up the same portability-survival thread in his blog Unsung, marking the 13th anniversary, and he quoted my February post in the process. His read: “I am worried about the open web, but excited seeing some resurgence in RSS usage, and more and more people wanting to come back to the feeling of control, care, and intentionality that using Reader represented.”
That resurgence Wichary is watching is what Guay’s closing points toward, too:
It was the open protocols, the RSS feeds and email, that alone offered a direct connection to your favorite writers and publications, unmediated by algorithms. Sure, they didn’t come with built in sharing features, they were harder to discover, they required more work to turn into a community. But once you did find them, they were sticky, a connection no one other than the publishers themselves could take away.
This blog is my version of that direct channel: a website, built one reader at a time, outside the platforms that decide what gets seen. I still miss Reader’s curation layer. The win is that the open-protocol layer underneath it—RSS, personal blogs, the direct connection—survived anyway.

Google Reader was building the wrong future
The app that taught us to directly follow our favorite creators.





















