I'm sebsauvage, webmaster of [sebsauvage.net](http://sebsauvage.net), author of [Shaarli](http://sebsauvage.net/wiki/doku.php?id=php:shaarli) and [ZeroBin](http://sebsauvage.net/wiki/doku.php?id=php:zerobin).
* Yves ASTIER ([Draeli](https://github.com/Draeli)) : PHP optimizations, fixes, dynamic brigde/format list with all stuff behind and extend cache system. Mail : contact@yves-astier.com
* There is a cache so that source services won't ban you even if you hammer the rss-bridge with requests. Each bridge has a different duration for the cache. The `cache` subdirectory will be automatically created. You can purge it whenever you want.
* To implement a new rss-bridge, create a new class in `bridges` subdirectory. Look at existing bridges for examples and the guidelines below. For items you generate in `$this->items`, only `uri` and `title` are mandatory in each item. `timestamp` and `content` are optional but recommended. Any additional key will be ignored by ATOM feed (but outputed to json).
### Bridge guidelines
* metatags: `@name` {Name of service}, `@homepage` {URL to homepage}, `@description`, `@update` {YYYY-MM-DD}, `@maintainer` {Github username or nickname}
* scripts (eg. Javascript) must be stripped out. Make good use of `strip_tags()` and `preg_replace()`
* bridge must present data within 8 seconds (adjust iterators accordingly)
* cache timeout must be fine-tuned so that each refresh can provide 1 or 2 new elements on busy periods
*`<audio>` and `<video>` must not autoplay. Seriously.
* do everything you can to extract valid timestamps. Translate formats, use API, exploit sitemap, whatever. Free the data!
* don't create duplicates. If the website runs on WordPress, use the generic WordPress bridge if possible.
* maintain efficient and well-commented code :wink:
Your catchword is "share", but you don't want us to share. You want to keep us within your walled gardens. That's why you've been removing RSS links from webpages, hiding them deep on your website, or removed RSS entirely, replacing it with crippled or demented proprietary API. **FUCK YOU.**
You're not social when you hamper sharing by removing RSS. You're happy to have customers creating content for your ecosystem, but you don't want this content out - a content you do not even own. Google Takeout is just a gimmick. We want our data to flow, we want RSS.
We want to share with friends, using open protocols: RSS, XMPP, whatever. Because no one wants to have *your* service with *your* applications using *your* API force-feeding them. Friends must be free to choose whatever software and service they want.