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Atomsub

Atomsub, or Atom Over XMPP, is a simple and yet ingenious idea which was realized by the gentlemen: Peter Saint-Andre; Joe Hildebrand; and Bob Wyman.

A memo which was published on May 7, 2008 and is titled "Atomsub: Transporting Atom Notifications over the Publish-Subscribe Extension to the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)" (codename: draft-saintandre-atompub-notify-07) describes a method for notifying interested parties about changes in syndicated information encapsulated in the Atom feed format, where such notifications are delivered via an extension to the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) for publish-subscribe functionality.

References

Herein resources concerning to Atomsub.

  • Atom Over XMPP: Presentation

    Peter Saint-Andre - Jabber Software Foundation - IETF 66

    draft-saintandre-atompub-notify

    datatracker.ietf.org ​  (PDF)

  • Atomsub

    Transporting Atom Notifications over the Publish-Subscribe Extension to the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)

    draft-saintandre-atompub-notify-07

    datatracker.ietf.org

  • ATOM over XMPP: PubSub message types

    One of different PubSub message types.

    wiki.xmpp.org

  • XEP-0060: Publish-Subscribe

    This is the general specification for PubSub.

    xmpp.org

  • XEP-0277: Microblogging over XMPP

    This specification defines a method for microblogging over XMPP.

    This specification is utilized by the publishing platform Libervia.

    xmpp.org ​  libervia.org

  • XEP-0472: Pubsub Social Feed

    This specification defines a way of publishing social content over XMPP.

    This specification is utilized by the publishing platform Movim.

    xmpp.org ​  movim.eu

Of note

These type of technologies are public information for over a couple of decades (i.e. more than 20 years); and people from corporations and governments with special interests, and who think that they have nothing better to do with their lives, have been attempting to suppress these technologies, and doing so is absolutely against your best interest.


“People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use.” ― Sören Kierkegaard