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.
Stay informed without staying online.
LinkedIn shut down its native RSS feed on December 19, 2013, alongside killing LinkedIn Answers. No replacement was ever shipped. The widespread folklore that you can append /rss to a newsletter URL is false. Narro generates an RSS feed for any public LinkedIn profile, company page, or newsletter, with posts in chronological order.
Four specific readers. If you recognize yourself in one of them, the rest of this page is for you.
Thirty specific founders and operators publish tactical posts you actually want. LinkedIn buries them under reposts, motivational AI slop, and hiring anniversaries. Narro pulls just the thirty, in order.
You owe LPs visibility into how founders are showing up publicly. Narro consolidates portfolio posts into one quiet read.
You need to know when a VP at a target account posts about hiring, tooling changes, or strategy shifts. Narro surfaces those signals without making you scroll past their CEO's marathon photos.
Track talent at a dozen competitors. Get a chronological stream of their public activity. No second-degree dilution, no LinkedIn nudging you toward someone else.
You joined LinkedIn for specific people. Then the platform inserted:
LinkedIn's algorithm is less aggressive than Meta's, but the engagement-injection ratio is the highest of any major professional platform. RSS reverses it: only the profiles you chose, only their own posts, in order.
Narro replaces the habit, not the apps.
LinkedIn shut down its network updates RSS feed on December 19, 2013, alongside killing LinkedIn Answers. The official line was about product focus: "we continually evaluate how our current products and features are being used. This sometimes means we remove a feature so we can focus our resources on building the best products."
In practice, the shutdown landed roughly two years after LinkedIn's IPO and alongside the launch of Sponsored Updates. RSS feeds were attention paid to LinkedIn content that did not also surface LinkedIn ads. The change was monetization-shaped, even if it was never described that way.
In 2026, LinkedIn offers no native RSS for profiles, company pages, posts, or newsletters. The only RSS-adjacent feature is inbound content-sharing for Pages (you can pipe an external RSS into your Page to schedule posts), which is the opposite of what readers want.
A piece of widespread internet folklore claims you can append /rss to a LinkedIn newsletter URL and get a feed. This is not true. LinkedIn does not expose RSS for newsletters at any URL.
Third-party scraper tools exist that mock up newsletter RSS by parsing the HTML. They work until LinkedIn changes its markup, at which point they break, sometimes for weeks at a time. They are brittle and they are unmaintained.
Narro handles newsletter posts as part of the creator's profile feed. When a creator publishes a newsletter, it appears in their Narro profile feed the same way a regular post does. One feed, one URL, durable.
Build a LinkedIn 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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