I'm also a happy RSS user—the only thing that bums me out is that almost every feed these days contains only the first 1-3 paragraphs of the article. I understand why—I'm not seeing their ads or visiting their site otherwise, but it does spoil the experience somewhat.
Thankfully many RSS readers have an equivalent to a browser's Reader Mode that fetches the page and strips all the crap out of it. It's not perfect by any stretch, but it beats getting blasted by cookie popups, newsletter signups, and autoplaying video.
I was just pondering.. one could add tokens to the links and dramatically reduce the number of ads and other cruft for RSS subscribers. Like say, do we even need a navigation menu? We look at every headline and are very likely to continue to visit if something interesting pops up. We are also much more forgiving if a bullshit article comes along. Its much better to have subscribers than visitors out of google. (The ratio depends on the content)
Personally I don't even parse the <content>, I just have headlines sorted by <pubDate> that open the pages in the browser.
Thankfully many RSS readers have an equivalent to a browser's Reader Mode that fetches the page and strips all the crap out of it. It's not perfect by any stretch, but it beats getting blasted by cookie popups, newsletter signups, and autoplaying video.