Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
FeedMail is an RSS-to-Email service that sends RSS/Atom Feed updates to your inbox. Users can enter a website or Feed URL on the subscription page, and the system will automatically detect available Feeds and send email alerts when new content is published. It is more like lightweight information-subscription infrastructure than a full RSS reader or enterprise content management platform.
According to the site content, FeedMail supports Atom and RSS2, with best-effort compatibility for older, non-standard RSS formats. If a Feed supports WebSub, emails can arrive instantly; otherwise, the system polls according to its rules, typically checking every 5 minutes. It also respects Feed requests to reduce polling frequency and lowers the check frequency for sources that fail or have not been updated for a long time. FeedMail also provides shareable subscription URLs and a Bookmarklet, making it easier for bloggers to add an email subscription entry point for readers.
FeedMail’s email filtering design is practical: users can add multiple email addresses and filter by recipient address, unique per-subscription sender address, List-Id, FeedMail-Categories, Entry-Id, and other email headers. On privacy, the service says it does not share users’ email addresses with anyone, and Feed owners can only see that someone is fetching content via FeedMail. Security information includes DKIM signatures, a privacy policy, security.txt, and a security vulnerability reporting email address, but no compliance certifications such as SOC 2, ISO 27001, or GDPR are disclosed.
The site only mentions that each user receives 400 free notifications, without specifying pricing after that, subscription plans, payment methods, or enterprise plans. From a value-for-money perspective, the barrier to entry for lightweight personal use is low, but the cost of long-term, high-volume subscriptions cannot be assessed. There is also no disclosed support for team collaboration, permission management, an official API, Webhooks, SDKs, self-hosted deployment, or enterprise integration capabilities.
Its strengths are simplicity, focus, friendliness to email-based workflows, and relatively detailed email filtering capabilities. Its weaknesses are the lack of information around commercialization and enterprise-grade features. FeedMail is suitable for individual readers, followers of independent blogs, developers, content creators, and site owners who want to add an email subscription option to their blogs. For enterprise users who need team knowledge bases, centralized permissions, auditing, compliance, and multi-system integrations, it may be worth evaluating Feedly, Inoreader, NewsBlur, or other RSS/automation solutions.
The site does not provide information on access from mainland China, payment support, or localization, so actual usability is unknown. If you plan to use it for reliable notifications, it is recommended to first test direct website access, email deliverability, and whether messages end up in spam. You may also want to prepare a domestic RSS reader, email subscription service, or automation platform as an alternative.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on feedmail.org official site.
feedmail.org is an Unknown Online Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach feedmail.org directly.