Castopod's Wiki
It all started in 1999 when Dan Libby and Ramanathan V. Guha at Netscape created RSS (now known as “Really Simple Syndication”).
RSS should have been the link between all content producers and web software, the “Information superhighway” would be freely available to everyone.
Unfortunately, as RSS was not able to compete with hegemonic and proprietary social networks, it started to be used less and less. Only a few people now use RSS on a daily basis to browse news and discover new topics. Content producers have given up.
However, there is one industry that still heavily relies on RSS feeds, for now: Podcasts. Almost all podcast softwares (client side and server side) are using RSS.
In the meantime, Podcasting is entering a new era.
During the past two decades, growth in audience was mainly driven by original audio content producers.
Major digital players and audio content industry are now investing on Podcasts. Around 750,000 podcasts and more than 30 million episodes were available in 2019.
Yet, compared to the standards in Social Media and Search Engines, Podcasts – technology, user experience – have not evolved much for the past 20 years. It is time for all players – Podcasters, Radio Networks, Journalists, Writers and all Voice lovers – to take control of their medium. Big corporations such as Apple, Spotify, Google and more, are building proprietary ecosystems: they create their own indexes, their own content, their own players and their own hosting solutions.
Exactly as we saw bloggers adopting “closed” media and content hosting platforms such as Medium, Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter, Podcasters are now slowly moving from open platforms to proprietary ones.
In order to give podcasters an alternative, we need a solution that answers their basic requirement and is able to compete with the big solutions. After all it is just mp3 files and RSS!
Our mission here is to help find a path to repairing podcast broadcasting and make it free again.