Narro is a user-curated social media app. Add the profiles you follow on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, Facebook, and LinkedIn — Narro shows their posts in order, with no algorithm, ads, or tracking.
Facebook turned off RSS for Pages on June 23, 2015. Narro gives every public Page a real RSS feed again, no Facebook account required.
Facebook removed RSS in June 2015. The /feeds/page.php endpoint that served Page RSS stopped returning data and was never replaced. Narro generates an RSS feed for any public Facebook Page or public Group, with posts in the order they were published, no Facebook account required.
Facebook Pages launched in November 2007 as a new feature for businesses, news outlets, and public figures to have a presence on the site. By the end of that year there were roughly 100,000 Pages. Organization Pages followed in 2009. The Like-a-Page pattern became the default way millions of small businesses, news outlets, churches, schools, and local governments published to the open web.
Until 2015, every Page exposed an RSS feed at facebook.com/feeds/page.php. The endpoint returned a Page's recent posts as Atom or RSS, without authentication, in chronological order. Feed readers, intranet dashboards, archivists, journalists, and ordinary residents all relied on it.
On June 23, 2015, the endpoint stopped returning data. The change was bundled inside the Graph API v2.0 to v2.3 migration. Facebook never issued a standalone announcement; it was a footnote in developer release notes.
Liking a Facebook Page no longer means you see its posts. Average organic reach for Pages has fallen from roughly 16 percent in 2012 to 1 to 2 percent as of recent measurement. The January 2018 News Feed change deprioritized Pages further in favor of friends and family.
The follower count on a local city government's Page doesn't mean that's the pages reach. Most followers will never see the next post about a road closure, a boil-water notice, or a school early-release. Pages still publish daily. The platform just decides which of their followers see anything.
RSS does not have a reach problem. Every post the Page publishes, in the order it published, in your reader.
Publicly viewable people, local businesses, news outlets, government agencies, schools, sports teams, theaters, churches. Yes. This is the page's primary use case.
Public Groups, yes. Private or closed Groups, no. Groups are member-gated and not designed as public broadcast surfaces, so Narro stays out of private spaces by design.
Content from private groups and profiles is not available via Narro.
You don't have to delete anything.
Town governments, county sheriffs, fire departments, school districts, and utility companies frequently post road closures, boil-water notices, weather alerts, and meeting agendas only on Facebook. RSS turns these into reliable infrastructure rather than algorithmic luck.
Many community newspapers and regional outlets publish first, or only, on their Facebook Page. Journalists and engaged residents can monitor a dozen of them from one reader.
Independent restaurants, farms, breweries, mechanics, and salons post hours changes, menus, and closures on Facebook because it is free and familiar. Customers without accounts can finally keep up.
Local theaters, libraries, churches, youth sports leagues, and neighborhood associations broadcast schedules and event changes through their Page. RSS turns the community calendar back on.
Build a Facebook feed in Narro, copy its RSS URL, and paste it into whichever reader you use. Setup is the same shape everywhere.
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