• Dom. Feb 15th, 2026

RSS Generator – FetchRSS FetchRSS is an online RSS feed generator that allows you to create RSS feeds from any web page. Simply provide the target URL and select the desired blocks using our visual RSS builder. Your feed will be generated in seconds. All generated RSS feeds are securely stored on our cloud servers, with a unique URL created for each feed. This URL can be used on your website or with various RSS readers and services. Once created, your RSS feed will automatically update whenever there is new content on the target webpage. No need to manually refresh the feed, as we constantly monitor all your RSS sources. Easily convert social network content into RSS feeds by entering the URL and generating the XML file URL in just two simple steps. For more advanced features, customize your feeds by adjusting the title, description, number of articles, image/video display, and more. Get feeds in various formats like RSS, ATOM, JSON, and CSV for developers. Filter content and create automatic modification rules to ensure you receive articles exactly as needed. If you need more information, check out our FAQ page or simply try it out for yourself.

What is FetchRSS?

RSS Generator

First of all it’s an online RSS feed generator.
This service allows you to create RSS feed out of almost any web page.
Your only task is to provide us with target URL and point on desired blocks in our visual RSS builder.
The rest is our job. And you get your feed in seconds

RSS storage cloud

Feed provider

We store your RSS feed in your account on our cloud servers.
We generate a unique URL for each feed you’ve created.
This URL can be used in HTML code at your website.
It can also be provided to one of many RSS readers or any other RSS-related service.

Content updates monitoring

Auto updated RSS

Once you’ve created your RSS feed it starts updating automatically.
All RSS feed content is updated each time there is something new in target web page.
No need to generate RSS each time to refresh it.
We are constantly monitoring each of your RSS feeds sources.

RSS from socials

RSS from social networks

Creating RSS feed from social networks is even simpler.
Just enter a URL you want to get RSS from and get your XML file URL immediately.
This URL can be a link to any user or page from major social networks like Facebook, Twitter and so on.
Two simple steps: enter a URL and click on Generate RSS button. Nothing more.

How does it work?

Sad FetchRSS guy

1. Enter a source URL

So you’d like to track updates from your favorite feed reader.
But it doesn’t provide an RSS.

Just enter its URL to our service.

Socials don't have RSS

Selector example

2. We’ll pull the news

Our bot will scan the page and automatically detect all the news, posts, and articles.

Or you could specify which exact content you’d like to have in your feed.

Happy FetchRSS guy

3. You have your RSS

We’ll do all the requests and other necessary magick.
And you get your RSS feed available any time by a unique URL.

From now on, you can read that feed in any service of your choice.

Advanced feeds features

Fine tune

Customise feeds title, description, number of articles, the way it display images and video and many more

Alternative formats

Get your feeds in RSS, ATOM format. as well as in JSON, CSV format for developers

Filter content

Decide which articles should be in your feeds and which not based on various conditions

Modify on the fly

Create automatic modification rules and always get the articles precisely as you need

Need more information?

If you would like to get more details or have additional questions,
there’s probably an answer already on our
Frequently Asked Questions
page

But the easiest way to understand something is just to

SOURCE

Michael Bunting

Por Michael Bunting

“I’m Michael Bunting, Communications Director with over 20 years of experience in corporate reputation, crisis management, and digital strategy. I have led teams in multinational companies and agencies, advised executives, and designed high-impact strategies. I am driven by transparency, innovation, and leveraging communication as a competitive advantage.”

Trial date set for Trump’s $10bn lawsuit against BBC over Panorama edit scheduled for February in Miami.
Are the recent AI resignations a sign of impending danger for the world? | Updates on Science, Climate & Technology News Are the recent AI resignations indicating a global crisis? | Science, Climate & Tech News Even though they exit without much fanfare, their departure is often viewed as a significant sign. This week has seen several high-profile resignations. Mrinank Sharma, a researcher at Anthropic, a leading AI company, posted a resignation statement on social media on Tuesday, warning that «the world is in peril.» While Sharma did not explicitly state the reason for the world being in danger, he mentioned that the threat was not just from AI or bioweapons but from a combination of ongoing interconnected crises. This led many to believe that the existential risk posed by AI is on the rise. Zoe Hitzig, a researcher at OpenAI, also resigned this week, expressing «deep reservations» about OpenAI’s decision to introduce advertising to ChatGPT in an essay for the New York Times. She cautioned that ChatGPT could potentially manipulate individuals if their data was not adequately safeguarded. Additionally, two co-founders of xAI left their positions this week, along with several other staff members at Elon Musk’s AI company. xAI, known for its Grok chatbot, faced backlash for allowing the generation of nonconsensual sexualized images before taking corrective action. Although these departures have been viewed as a significant event, upon closer examination, they seem to have little in common.
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Are the recent AI resignations a sign of impending danger for the world? | Updates on Science, Climate & Technology News Are the recent AI resignations indicating a global crisis? | Science, Climate & Tech News Even though they exit without much fanfare, their departure is often viewed as a significant sign. This week has seen several high-profile resignations. Mrinank Sharma, a researcher at Anthropic, a leading AI company, posted a resignation statement on social media on Tuesday, warning that «the world is in peril.» While Sharma did not explicitly state the reason for the world being in danger, he mentioned that the threat was not just from AI or bioweapons but from a combination of ongoing interconnected crises. This led many to believe that the existential risk posed by AI is on the rise. Zoe Hitzig, a researcher at OpenAI, also resigned this week, expressing «deep reservations» about OpenAI’s decision to introduce advertising to ChatGPT in an essay for the New York Times. She cautioned that ChatGPT could potentially manipulate individuals if their data was not adequately safeguarded. Additionally, two co-founders of xAI left their positions this week, along with several other staff members at Elon Musk’s AI company. xAI, known for its Grok chatbot, faced backlash for allowing the generation of nonconsensual sexualized images before taking corrective action. Although these departures have been viewed as a significant event, upon closer examination, they seem to have little in common.