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Feedly AI understands threat actor groups

Por Lucinda Jukes
Research threat actor groups and learn more about their tactics, techniques, and procedures, without the overwhelm

Cyber attacks continue to wreak havoc around the world. The actors waging these wars don’t just care about fraud either. They’re part of criminal organisations. Foreign governments stealing data for defense or national interests. Even terrorists or activists driven to disrupt and cause harm. 

What’s more, they’re increasingly capable and sophisticated. It’s a growing threat that can strike anyone at any time.

When you learn about threat actors’ tactics and motivations, you can better prepare against them, saving you the costs and headaches that come with a breach or attack. 

But there’s so much content to wade through when investigating these threat actors. It’s like fishing blind in an ocean. You’ll never know what’s coming back on the hook. More time and stress is spent on finding information about the threat, rather than acting on it. You can be overwhelmed. 

We’re passionate about helping you refine and streamline your open-source intelligence. That’s why we’ve taught Feedly AI to recognize threat actor groups. It can find them in your Feedly security feeds, prioritizing articles related to the actors and sectors you care about.

Let’s imagine that you work in the telecommunications sector, and you’re researching the tactics and motivations of MuddyWater, an Iranian threat actor group.

Cut through the noise

You can train Feedly AI to read all your cybersecurity, foreign affairs, and cyber warfare sources, and prioritize articles related to MuddyWater.

Prioritize a threat actor

Feedly AI continuously reads the articles in your feeds and prioritizes the ones that mention MuddyWater (or any of its aliases). It’s a powerful and effective way to keep up with their latest techniques, tactics, and procedures.

You’re in control

Feedly AI has been trained to recognize all the threat actor groups referenced by the MITRE ATT&CK framework. This is a list of common names for hacking groups, as recognized by the global security community.

Asking Feedly AI to prioritize MuddyWater in your security feed is as simple as creating a new Topic priority and selecting ‘MuddyWater’ as the topic.

Enter a threat actor alias in the topic field

When you prioritize MuddyWater, Feedly AI will also look for other synonyms for that group like Seedworm and TEMP.Zagros.

You can combine topics with +AND and +OR to create even more targeted priorities for Feedly AI. For example, use +AND to combine an actor group with an attack vector or a sector. This narrows his focus further so you find exactly what you’re looking for.

Continuously learning and getting smarter

Because Feedly AI is integrated with the MITRE ATT&CK framework, it’s continuously learning and getting smarter. As new groups or aliases are identified, they’ll be automatically updated in your Feedly.

Feedly AI recognizes threat actor groups listed on the MITRE ATT&CK framework

Break down silos

As you search and discover new content, share insights with your research team. Together, you can create a Threat Intel Report Feedly Board and bookmark the most critical insights you discover. You can also add notes and highlights about why a threat is high-priority.

We’ve already seen security teams create tactical Boards, such as a Vulnerability Report, to share with their operations experts. You might also want to build a CISO Newsletter to keep your management updated. It’s all possible within Feedly.  

Articles bookmarked in a Board can be shared with the rest of the team via daily newsletters, Slack or Microsoft Teams notifications, or pushed to other apps using the Feedly Cybersecurity API.

Share the threat intelligence you collect in Feedly with other teams and apps

Streamline your open-source intelligence

We’re excited to see how your security team will declutter your feeds and dig deeper into the critical threats that matter to you. Sign up today and discover Feedly for Cybersecurity.

If you’re interested in learning more about Feedly AI’s roadmap, you can join the Feedly Community Slack channel. 2020 will be a thrilling year with new skills and bold experiments!

Feedly AI understands malware threats

Por Lucinda Jukes
Research and prepare for the latest malware threats without the information overload

Cybersecurity is a game of foresight. It’s a chessboard on which attackers and defenders are constantly looking for checkmate. 

Hackers launch a new ransomware attack every 14 seconds. They’re increasingly more capable and sophisticated. Learning how they plan attacks, what techniques they use, and who they’re targeting, can make you so much better prepared. You’ll save the cost and headache of a cyber assault too. This is especially important considering that the cost of ransomware attacks in the U.S. alone surpassed $7.5 billion in 2019.

But investigating malware threats is tedious. Hundreds of new articles and tweets need to be reviewed and triaged every day. Finding critical threats in that sea of information is time-consuming and overwhelming.

We want to help you streamline your tactical and operational open-source intelligence, so that you can better protect your environment.

That’s why we’ve taught Feedly AI, to recognize malware threats. You can ask it to read your security feeds and prioritize what’s relevant to you, your sector, and your environment.

Let’s imagine that you work in a threat intelligence team and are responsible for researching and analyzing the threat landscape. You’re particularly interested in evolving malware threats (including ransomware and malvertisement).

Cut through the noise

You can train Feedly AI to read your Security News feed and prioritize articles related to malware.

Feedly AI prioritizes malware articles in your Security News feed

Feedly AI continuously reads the thousands of articles published in those feeds. It’s an efficient way to cut through the noise and keep up with the evolving malware landscape without the overwhelm.

You’re in control

Feedly AI has been trained to understand broad topics like malware, as well as hundreds of specific malware types like malvertisement, ransomware, adware, bots, rootkits, spyware, etc.

Asking Feedly AI to prioritize malware in your Security News feed is as simple as creating a new Topic priority and selecting ‘malware’ as the topic.

Ask Leo to prioritize malware threats in your Security News feed

You can combine topics with +AND and +OR and create even more targeted priorities for Feedly AI. For example, use +AND to focus on malware related to Android or top companies in your sector.

Refine the priority to malware and Android

You can also ask Feedly AI to look for a specific type of malware like malvertisement or ransomware.

Prioritize ransomware threats

Continuously learning and getting smarter

Feedly AI is smart. It continuously learns from your feedback. When Feedly AI is wrong, you can use the ‘Less Like This’ down arrow button to let it know that an article it prioritized isn’t about malware.

Let Feedly AI know when it’s wrong

Break down silos

Bring your research team into the picture. They can create a Threat Intel Report Board and save the most critical insights they discover in their Feedly. Then everyone with the same Board can leave notes and highlight the biggest threats. 

We’ve seen teams create tactical and operational Boards. For instance, a Vulnerability Report can be built up with information for those that deal with security procedures, while strategic CISO Newsletters can keep management up to speed about malware and your planned response.

Articles bookmarked in a Board can be shared with the rest of the team via daily newsletters, Slack and Microsoft Teams notifications, or pushed to other apps using the Feedly Cybersecurity API.

Share the threat intelligence you collect in Feedly with other teams and apps

Streamline your open-source intelligence

We’re excited to see how your security team will declutter your feeds and dig deeper into the critical threats that matter to you. Sign up today and discover Feedly for Cybersecurity.

Introducing Feedly for Cybersecurity

Por Edwin K
Streamline your open-source intelligence

150,000 cybersecurity professionals use Feedly to keep up with the latest security news and research insights about critical threats (vulnerabilities, malware, data breaches, threat actor groups, etc.)

Cybersecurity is a game of foresight. It is a chessboard where hackers and defenders are looking to checkmate each other.

Learning more about the tactics, techniques, and procedures used by hackers can help you better prepare against them, saving you the cost and headaches that come with a breach or attack. The cost of ransomware attacks in the U.S. surpassed $7.5 billion in 2019.

But information gathering is tedious: hundreds of new articles and tweets need to be reviewed and triaged every day. Finding critical threats in that sea of information is time-consuming and overwhelming.

Today, we’re excited to launch Feedly for Cybersecurity: a collection of integrations and AI Models that help you cut through the noise, break barriers between team silos, and streamline your threat intelligence.

Ask Feedly AI to read your security feeds and prioritize what matters to you:

Leo recognizes pharmaceutical drugs from recreational drugs

Por Olivia Malterre
Leo now makes a difference between pharma drugs and recreational drugs

We heard from lots of biopharma users that the Drugs topic could be improved and clarified, considering the different meanings it has.

We are excited to announce that you can now prioritize either pharmaceutical drugs or recreational drugs.

We have taught Leo to understand if an article is about pharma drugs or recreational ones to improve the relevance of his prioritization.

Let me show you how it works.

Pharmaceutical Drugs

Let’s imagine that you have a Science Journals feed and want to track updates about drugs treating cancer. Let’s train Leo to read this feed and cut through the noise for you.

Click ‘Train Leo’ and search for the new #Drugs (pharmaceutical) topic
Leo knows how to recognize articles about pharmaceutical drugs

You can see a preview of all the articles that Leo has recognized as related to pharmaceutical drugs and cancer. These articles will be prioritized in your feed.

Recreational Drugs

Now, you can do the same with recreational drugs. Let’s say you want to prioritize articles that are at the intersection of recreational drugs and epilepsy.

Search for the new #Drugs (recreational) Leo topic

Leo will continuously learn and get smarter as he prioritizes articles about pharma drugs or recreational drugs, letting you focus on the topics and trends that matter to you.

After two months of Leo utilization, I can say that he saved us two of the three hours that we needed weekly to do our job, with the same or better quality. Really performant. Good job and long life to Leo 😉

Jessyca Duer, UnitedHealth Group

Train your Leo now

We are excited to see many Feedly users declutter their feeds and dig deeper into the topics and trends that matter to them. Sign up today and discover what Leo can do for you!

If you are interested in learning more about Leo’s roadmap, you can join the Feedly Community Slack. 2020 will be a challenging year, but by staying informed, you can respond better and remain in control. 

Streamline your scientific research with PubMed feeds

Por Olivia Malterre
Research biomedical literature by following custom PubMed feeds on Feedly

Scientific journals produce overwhelming amounts of information every day. But a small portion of these articles refers to the biomedical information you need to research about.

Save time and keep up with the biomedical news you are looking for by following custom PubMed RSS feeds on Feedly.

Go to PubMed.gov

You are a scientist researching cancer and immunology. You can create an Advanced search query on PubMed and select the journals you want to research mentions of cancer in.

Go to PubMed.gov and click ‘Advanced’

Build your advanced query

PubMed covers a wide range of journals, biomedical terms and authors. The more specific your search query is, the more relevant results you will get.

Use PubMed’s Advanced Search Builder
You can choose the journals you want to research cancer in
You can select the diseases you want to research
We now have a complex query to look for mentions of Cancer in Nature, Nature Immunology, Current Biology and PLOS Biology


For more details about the various ways to create PubMed queries, you can read more information here.

Create your custom PubMed RSS feed

Once on the results page, you can further filter by article type, publication type, etc. Hit ‘Create RSS’ when you are ready to move forward. 

Click ‘Create RSS’ when you are happy with the results of your query
Copy the custom RSS feed that was just created

Add your custom PubMed RSS feed to your Feedly

Click on ‘+’ in your Feedly, paste the PubMed RSS feed you just created and add it to any of your feeds.

Paste the RSS link into the Search box
Annotate and save your PubMed content to your boards

Prioritize with Leo

Save time and prioritize genes or any other topic in your PubMed articles.

Create a Leo priority in your feed

Streamline your biopharma intelligence

We’re excited to see how your team will declutter your feeds and dig deeper into the biopharma news that matter to you. Sign up today and discover Feedly for Biopharma.

If you’re interested in learning more about the Feedly for Biopharma roadmap, you can schedule a demo call by clicking on the button above. 2020 will be a thrilling year with new skills and bold experiments!

Track biopharma regulatory updates with Clinicaltrials.gov feeds

Por Olivia Malterre
Streamline your biopharma intelligence by adding custom ClinicalTrials.gov feeds to your Feedly

Clinical trial updates produce overwhelming amounts of information every day. But a small portion of these articles refers to the diseases and studies you want to monitor.

Cut through the noise and build custom RSS feeds on ClinicalTrials.gov with the information you need.

Go to ClinicalTrials.gov

You are the head of an AIDS research program in a large pharma company. You can create a query on ClinicalTrials.gov to look into clinical trial news coming from other research labs.

Go to ClinicalTrials.gov

Create your query

ClinicalTrials.gov covers a wide range of clinical trials that occur every day. You can either search a single keyword or create an advanced query with certain study types, locations, ages…

Select the disease you want to track

You can find more information about how to use the ClinicalTrials.gov search.

Subscribe to your custom CT.gov RSS feed

You can look into the results of your query and add additional filters if needed. When you are satisfied with the entries, click ‘Subscribe to RSS’.

This will lead you to the RSS feed you’ll have to copy.

Click ‘Subscribe to RSS’ on the top right-hand corner
We recommend selecting ‘Show studies added or modified in the last 14 days’. 
Copy the RSS link from this tab

Add your custom CT.gov RSS feed to your Feedly

Click ‘+’ on Feedly to paste the CT.gov RSS feed you just copied. Add it to any of the feeds you’d like and start reading your selected ClinicalTrials.gov content!

Paste your CT.gov RSS feed into your Feedly
Read, annotate and save the articles to your boards

Streamline your biopharma intelligence

We’re excited to see how your team will declutter your feeds and dig deeper into the biopharma news that matter to you. Sign up today and discover Feedly for Biopharma.

If you’re interested in learning more about the Feedly for Biopharma roadmap, you can demo a call by clicking on the button above. 2020 will be a thrilling year with new skills and bold experiments!

Leo understands diseases and conditions

Por Olivia Malterre
Research diseases and learn about the latest breakthroughs more efficiently

The biopharma space has become more and more competitive and it is now extremely tedious to scan through hundreds of articles every day to track down all the latest scientific and technological breakthroughs about a specific disease or condition you are interested about.

We’re excited to announce that you can now prioritize diseases and conditions with Leo, your AI research assistant.

Let’s walk through an example of how you could use Leo to prioritize diseases. Imagine you do market and competitive intelligence at a pharma company and you want to track clinical trials and regulatory updates about cardiovascular diseases.

Cut through the noise

You can train Leo to read your biopharma feeds and prioritize articles related to cardiovascular diseases.

Leo prioritizes cardiovascular disease articles in your Science Journals feed

Leo continuously reads the thousands of articles published in your feeds. It’s an efficient way to cut through the noise and keep up with the latest news about methodologies and clinical trials.

You’re in control

We’ve trained Leo to understand 5,000 diseases & conditions and 50,000 of their aliases from the MeSH database. This database belongs to the US National Library of Medicine and is used by leading websites such as PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov.

Asking Leo to prioritize cardiovascular diseases in any of your biopharma feeds is as simple as creating a new Topic priority and selecting “cardiovascular diseases” as the topic.

When you create a ‘cardiovascular diseases’ priority, Leo will be looking for the aliases of cardiovascular diseases but also for all the disorders classified as cardiovascular diseases in MeSH.

Leo will be looking for all the disorders classified as cardiovascular diseases in MeSH

You can combine topics with +AND and +OR and create even more targeted priorities for Leo. For example, use +AND to focus on FDA approvals related to cardiovascular diseases.

Refine the priority to cardiovascular diseases and FDA approval

You can also ask Leo to look for a specific type of cardiovascular disease like coronary artery disease.

Prioritize a specific disease, such as coronary artery disease

Leo continuously learns

Leo is smart. He continuously learns from your feedback. When Leo is wrong, you can use the ‘Less Like This’ down arrow button to let him know that an article he’s prioritized isn’t about cardiovascular diseases.

Downvote an article to tell Leo when he’s wrong

See how Feedly for Biopharma can help you and your team dig deeper into the diseases and conditions you’re researching.

Leo understands genes

Por Olivia Malterre
Research genes and learn more about the latest breakthroughs more efficiently

Drug development is a highly competitive space and the information about gene innovations is scattered across multiples sources, which makes the gene scouting process time consuming and tedious.

We are excited to announce that you can now prioritize genes with Leo, your AI research assistant.

Let’s walk through an example of how you could use Leo to prioritize a gene. Imagine you lead a research program about immuno-oncology at a biotech startup and you want to track any updates about IL33.

Cut through the noise

You can train Leo to read your biopharma feeds and prioritize articles related to IL33.

Leo prioritizes IL33 in your biopharma feeds

Leo continuously reads the thousands of articles published in your feeds. It’s an efficient way to cut through the noise and keep up with the latest news about methodologies and clinical trials.

You’re in control

We’ve trained Leo to understand 42,000 genes and 185,000 aliases from the NCBI database. This database belongs to the US National Library of Medicine and is used by leading websites such as PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov.

Asking Leo to prioritize “IL33” in any of your biopharma feeds is as simple as creating a new Topic priority and selecting “IL33” as the topic.

When you create an “IL33” priority, Leo will be looking for all the aliases of “IL33“. What’s best is that these aliases were all disambiguated, which means Leo knows which aliases refer to genes, and which refer to unrelated topics, so you can be sure you’re prioritizing the right content.

Leo will be looking for IL33 and its 11 aliases as classified by NCBI

You can combine topics with +AND and +OR and create even more targeted priorities for Leo.

Leo continuously learns

Leo is smart. He continuously learns from your feedback. When Leo is wrong, you can use the ‘Less Like This’ down arrow button to let him know that an article he’s prioritized isn’t about cardiovascular diseases.

Downvote an article to tell Leo when he’s wrong

See how Feedly for Biopharma can help you and your team dig deeper into the genes you’re researching.

Leo understands biopharma companies

Por Olivia Malterre
Track your competitors efficiently

The biopharma space has become more and more competitive. It’s tedious to scan through hundreds of articles every day to track your competitors or find potential partnerships.

We are excited to announce that you can now prioritize biopharma companies with Leo, your AI research assistant.

Let’s walk through an example of how you could use Leo to prioritize news about competitors. Imagine you do market and competitive intelligence at a pharma company and you want to track biopharma companies.

Cut through the noise

You can train Leo to read your biopharma feeds and prioritize articles related to biopharma companies.

Leo prioritizes biopharma companies

Leo continuously reads the thousands of articles published in your feeds. It’s an efficient way to cut through the noise and keep up with the latest news about partnerships, methodologies and clinical trials.

You’re in control

We’ve trained Leo to understand 230 biopharma companies that are categorized into four different types of organizations:

  • The topic “Biopharma companies” allows you to prioritize the top global biopharma companies in the world, including Roche, Pfizer, etc.
  • The topic “Biotech companies” allows you to prioritize the top global biotech firms and startups, including Gilead, Arsenal Bio, etc.
  • The topic “Drug manufacturers” allows you to prioritize the top global drug manufacturing firms and startups, including Johnson & Johnson, Novartis, etc.
  • The topic “Generic pharmaceutical companies” allows you to prioritize the top global generic pharma companies, including Krka, Glenmark, etc.

Asking Leo to prioritize Biopharma companies in any of your biopharma feeds is as simple as creating a new Topic priority and selecting ‘Biopharma companies’ as the topic.

You can look into the companies that belong to those list topics by following this link.

Leo will be looking for all the top global biopharma companies

You can combine topics with +AND and +OR and create even more targeted priorities for Leo. For example, use +AND to focus on news related to breast cancer and biopharma companies.

Refine the priority to biopharma companies and breast neoplasms

If you find that a lot of the information you get about biopharma companies are noisy market reports, you can exclude market reports by using the +NOT in your Leo priority.

Mute out market reports from your Leo priority about biopharma companies

Leo continuously learns

Leo is smart. He continuously learns from your feedback. When Leo is wrong, you can use the ‘Less Like This’ down arrow button to let him know that an article he’s prioritized isn’t about biopharma companies.

Downvote an article to tell Leo when he’s wrong

See how Feedly for Biopharma can help you and your team dig deeper into the competitors you’re tracking.

Introducing Feedly for Biopharma

Por Olivia Malterre
Streamline your biopharma intelligence

Today, we’re excited to launch Feedly for Biopharma to help biopharma professionals cut through the noise. We’ve designed a collection of integrations and Leo models specifically designed to help you find the information you need, break barriers between teams, and streamline open-source intelligence.

280,000 biopharma professionals already use Feedly to keep up with the latest biopharma news and research insights about topics like diseases and conditions, genes, and competitors.

Biopharma is a competitive space. It is key for pharma and biotech companies to keep ahead of their competition and to be aware of the latest scientific and technological breakthroughs.

Learning more about the diseases and methodologies that are being researched by other biopharma companies can help you better prepare your strategic plans and research programs. According to a new analysis published in JAMA in March 2020, the cost to develop a new drug for a US biopharma company is $1 billion.

With hundreds of articles, scientific publications, and regulatory updates to read and organize every day, biopharma intelligence research is overwhelming. Finding the information you need in that sea of information is time-consuming and tedious. We’re launching Feedly for Biopharma to help biopharma professionals cut through the noise and save time.

Follow the biopharma sources you need

We’ve hand-picked the best sources in your industry to create biopharma bundles so you can keep up with trends. Choose any of the bundles below to see the different bundles of sources.

  • The Biopharma Business Bundle covers the top trade publications in the biopharma sector (Endpoints, FiercePharma, BioPharma Dive, etc.)
  • The Biopharma Regulatory Bundle allows you to track the latest regulatory and clinical trial updates in the biopharma sector (Eye on FDA, EMA Press Releases, Drugs.com, etc.)
  • The Science Journals Bundle helps you find the best peer-review publications to follow (JAMA, Nature, ScienceDaily, The Lancet, etc.)
  • The HealthTech Bundle covers digital health blogs and publications (MedCity News, Xconomy, MobiHealthNews, etc.)
Follow the biopharma source bundles you’re most interested in.

Define Leo priorities based on what you’re most interested in

Leo is your AI research assistant. Ask him to read your biopharma feeds and prioritize what matters to you. Leo can recognize genes, diseases and conditions, biopharma companies and startups, topics, trends, specific events, and more.

Break down silos

Team Boards are the private spaces where you and your team can save the best content you discover in Feedly or on the web. You can bookmark, organize, and annotate content to share insights across your team and organization.

We’ve seen teams create tactical and operational Boards. For instance, you could build a Biotech Watchlist board with information about open innovation partnerships, or a Novel Drug Approvals board to keep the team up to speed on what your competitors are developing.

Once articles have been saved to a board, you can share them to the rest of the team via daily newsletters, Slack and Microsoft Teams notifications, or push them to other apps using our API.

Share the intelligence you collect in Feedly with other teams and apps

Streamline your biopharma intelligence

We’re excited to see how your team will declutter your feeds and dig deeper into the biopharma news that matter to you. Sign up today and discover Feedly for Biopharma.

If you’re interested in learning more about the Feedly for Biopharma roadmap, you can book a demo call by clicking on the button above. 2020 will be a thrilling year with new skills and bold experiments!

Find the content you need with Biopharma Search Mode

Por Olivia Malterre
Save time and find the biopharma content you need

The amount of information published every day in the biopharma space is overwhelming and hard to skim through.

Today we’re excited to announce the launch of Biopharma Search Mode, a tool that allows you to save time in your research flow. You can drill down into the specific content you want, beyond your existing feeds and sources.

With Biopharma Search Mode, you can find articles you would have not found otherwise, discover new sources and save the pieces of content you find interesting. This feature is available to all Biopharma Enterprise users.

Let’s walk through an example of how you could use Biopharma Search Mode to find articles you need. Imagine you lead an R&D team at a biotech company and you want to learn about the latest breakthroughs related to cell therapies.

Create your search query

First, click on the search icon in the left navigation bar, and select ‘Search Across the Web’.

Type in a topic you want to research and select Biopharma Mode. When you search in Biopharma Mode, you’re searching across sources we’ve preselected based on biopharma users’ favorite industry-specific sources, and you’ll get less noise.

Go to the Power Search and select the Biopharma Mode

You’re in control

Ask Leo to search for “cell therapy” in any of the biopharma sources we curated for you. Create a search query and select “cell therapy” as the topic.

You can refine your query and combine topics with +AND and +OR.

You can create even more targeted queries by selecting the types of publications you want on the left-hand side: pick from 300 science journals, 800 biopharma trade publications, 80 regulatory sources, or 350 healthtech blogs.

For example, use +AND to focus on news related to cell therapies and biopharma companies, and select the Biopharma Business type of publications only.

Refine the search query to cell therapy and biopharma companies among trade publications

Go further and refine your search by excluding certain topics, or by selecting ‘Title Only’ vs ‘Entire Content’. Find more information about how to do this here.

Break down silos

Team Boards are the private spaces where you and your team can save the best content you discover in Feedly or on the web. You can bookmark, organize, and annotate content to share insights across your team and organization.

Once you’ve discovered a great new article, you can save it to a board and share it with the rest of your team via daily newsletters, Slack and Microsoft Teams notifications, or push it to other apps using our API.

Save the most insightful content to your boards

You can also click on the source name and see the other articles that the source has published. This is a powerful way to find new sources for niche topics. If the content is highly relevant, you can use the ‘Follow’ button to add that new source to one of your Team Feeds and receive the next articles published by that source.

Streamline your biopharma intelligence

We’re excited to see how your team will declutter your feeds and dig deeper into the biopharma news that matters to you. Sign up today and discover Feedly for Biopharma.

If you’re interested in learning more about the Feedly for Biopharma roadmap, you can book a demo call by clicking on the button above.

How to follow Twitter handles and searches in Feedly

Por Annie Bacher
Pull content from Twitter accounts, hashtags, Lists, and searches directly into your Feedly feeds

Update: As of July 2023, the Twitter integration is only available to Feedly Enterprise users. This is happening because Twitter has discontinued the (much cheaper) API we used to to use.

View our recent blog post with more details about the Feedly Twitter integration


Twitter is full of insightful news and trends. But integrating those insights into your research flow can be overwhelming and time-consuming. We hear from users all the time that you want to be able to bring parts of Twitter into your Feedly feeds for researching and monitoring trends.

Today, we’re excited to share the new Twitter Integration for Feedly!

You can follow Twitter accounts, hashtags, Lists, and searches. Even more exciting, Feedly can pull content from linked articles directly into your feeds. And Feedly AI, can cut through the noise and prioritize or mute certain topics to make sure you only see tweets with essential information for your research.

One of my favorite features is the Feedly Twitter integration. I can stay informed about events and conversations I might otherwise miss, without it affecting how I use Twitter and cluttering up my feed.

Jon Henshaw, Founder of Coywolf

Get started with the Feedly Twitter integration

Get your tweets in Feedly and let Feedly AI filter out the noise. Now available to all users in our new Pro+ plan.

GET TWITTER INTEGRATION

Follow Twitter accounts in Feedly

Search for any Twitter handle in the ‘Twitter feeds’ tab, just like you would with any other source on Feedly.

When you search for an account, you’ll see two options: ‘Tweets’ and ‘Tweets with Links’.

Follow ‘Tweets’ to see all tweets from an account.

Follow ‘Tweets with Links’ to follow only tweets from this account that link out to articles, videos, pictures, or any other type of external content. This lets you skip any tweets without external content.

Choosing ‘Tweets with Links’ is great because:

  • If possible, we’ll extract the content of linked articles and make the content appear inline, just like any other article in your feeds.
  • You can create an AI Feed on both the tweet and the content of the article when it’s extracted. We’ll tell you more about AI Feeds in a second.
Search for an account, and then choose whether you want to follow all tweets, or only tweets that link to external content.

Scan tweets — and the articles they link to — in your feeds

Tweets are aggregated into your feeds with the rest of your content. When you click on a tweet that links to an article, the article will open in Feedly.

Tweets are aggregated into your feeds with the rest of your content.

Read and annotate linked articles directly in your Feedly

We’ll pull the content of linked articles inline so you can read and annotate them in your Feedly. Add notes or highlights without having to click away to Twitter or another site to read or save the article.

When a tweet links to an article, you can open the article right in Feedly.

I can interact with tweets the same way I would with articles by saving, highlighting, and pushing them to other services.

Jon Henshaw, Founder of Coywolf

Train Feedly AI to prioritize specific topics, companies, or business events

This is where it gets powerful. Feedly AI helps cut through the noise of tweets in your feeds and find what’s essential to you. Click ‘Train Leo’ to create a priority.

Ask Feedly AI to prioritize topics, like “Tik Tok”, and then use AND, OR, and NOT to refine your priority.

Feedly AI reads both the content of the tweet and any linked content to decide whether or not a tweet should be prioritized.

Train Feedly AI to mute tweets that aren’t important to you

Just like any other piece of content in Feedly, you can train Feedly AI to mute tweets about topics you don’t care about, so you only see essential news in your feeds.

Feedly AI reads both the content of the tweet and any linked content to decide whether or not to mute a tweet.

You can ask Feedly AI to mute any content related to a topic, like COVID-19.

Follow Twitter hashtags in Feedly

You can follow all tweets mentioning a specific hashtag. You’ll see two options, just like when following an account: ‘Tweets’, and ‘Tweets with Links’.

If you follow the hashtag #b2bmarketing, for example, you can choose:

  • #b2bmarketing Tweets: all tweets will be pulled into your feeds
  • #b2bmarketing Tweets with Links: only tweets about #b2bmarketing that link to external content will be pulled into your feeds
Follow all tweets with #b2bmarketing, or choose to follow only tweets that link to other content.

Follow Twitter Lists in Feedly

You can also follow Twitter Lists, which are curated groups of Twitter accounts.

Follow both your own Lists and other users’ public Lists. Just paste the link of the Twitter List directly into the search bar in the ‘Twitter feeds’ tab.

Copy the URL of the List you want to follow, and paste it directly into Feedly.

Follow Twitter searches, or create advanced search queries to follow in Feedly

Type your search directly into the search bar in Feedly, and the integration will continually pull updated results of the search into your feed.

Here’s a helpful list of Twitter’s standard operators that you can use to refine your search.

Type your search directly into Feedly to add it as a source. Use operators like -filter:retweets to remove retweets from the results.

You can also use the advanced search options on Twitter. Once you’ve created an advanced search in Twitter, click ‘Search’ and then paste the link to the advanced search directly into the search bar in your Feedly.

I was struggling to search through my bookmarked tweets on Twitter. But now I can follow my favorite Twitter users, star articles from Twitter and add them to boards. They are easily searchable and I can even annotate and highlight parts.

David, professor at a large public university

Get started with the Feedly Twitter integration

Get your tweets in Feedly and let Feedly AI filter out the noise. Now available to all users in our new Pro+ plan.

GET TWITTER INTEGRATION

FAQs about the Feedly Twitter integration

How do I get started with the Twitter integration? What can I follow?

Anyone on a Pro+ or Enterprise plan has access to the Twitter integration. Once you’ve connected your account to Twitter (go to the ‘Twitter feeds’ tab in Feedly to set it up) you can follow accounts, hashtags, searches, or Lists.

Can I follow protected Twitter accounts?

Yes. If the Twitter account you want to follow is protected, just make sure the Twitter account you’re using to connect to Feedly follows the protected account.

How do I remove retweets?

Right now, it’s not possible to explicitly remove retweets. If you want to remove retweets from your feeds, our recommendation is to hide retweets from inside your Twitter account. Here’s how

Do I need to follow both ‘Tweets’ and ‘Tweets with links’ for an account or hashtag?

You only need to follow one. Choose ‘Tweets’ and you’ll get all tweets, with and without links.

Choose ‘Tweets with Links’ to get only tweets that link to external content, like articles or videos.

Is it possible to filter a search further once I follow a hashtag?

Yes. Our advice is to first use Twitter’s advanced search to refine your search. Then, once you’re satisfied with the results, copy and paste the URL of the search in Feedly to create a new source.

Can I publish to Twitter from Feedly?

When you connect your Feedly to your Twitter account, this is a read-only connection allowing your Feedly to read tweets. Feedly doesn’t write any tweets. To share insights from Feedly to Twitter, click the Twitter icon at the top of any article to generate a tweet and share your insights.

Can I follow my own Twitter account?

Yes. If you want to follow the timeline you see when you go to twitter.com, then type “twitter.com/” into the search bar. The timeline of the Twitter account that’s connected to your Feedly account will be pulled into your feeds.

If you want to see your own tweets, you can follow yourself — just type your Twitter username into the search bar.

Will every single tweet from that hashtag get pulled into my feeds?

Yes. If you add a hashtag as a source, all the tweets generated for that hashtag get pulled into your feed. If you’re getting too much noise from a hashtag, we recommend training Feedly AI to prioritize or mute certain keywords or topics so that you only see what’s most important to you.

What’s the limit for articles from Twitter per day?

Feedly has a limit of 1,000 articles per day from each Twitter source.

Feedly AI learns from the community

Por Jessica Hodson
Leo
We’re designing systems to protect against machine learning bias

In the wake of recent acts of extreme brutality and injustice and mass protests, we’re examining our role in perpetuating systems of inequality. We are responsible for our impact as a tech company, as a news reader, and, acutely, as a developer of machine learning algorithms for Feedly AI. 

Artificial intelligence and machine learning are powerful tools that allow Feedly AI to read thousands of articles published every day and prioritize a top selection based on the topics, organizations, and trends that matter to you. However, if not designed intentionally, these tools run the risk of reinforcing harmful cultural biases.

Bias sneaks into machine learning algorithms by way of incomplete or imbalanced training data. Without realizing it, we miss or overrepresent certain variables and the algorithm learns the wrong information, often with dangerous outcomes.

In the case of Feedly AI, we risk introducing bias when teaching it broad topics such as “leadership.” Feedly AI learns these topics by finding common themes in sets of articles curated by the Feedly team. For the topic “leadership,” Feedly AI might pick out themes like strong management skills and building a supportive team culture. However, if more articles about male leaders than female are published or added to the training set, Feedly AI might also learn that being male is a quality of leadership. Tracking which themes Feedly AI learns is an essential part of topic modeling that helps prevent us from reinforcing our biases or those of the article author or publisher.

It’s on us as developers to be deliberate and transparent about the way we account for bias in our training process. With that in mind, we’re excited to share what we’re working on to reduce bias at the most crucial stage: the training data

Break down silos

Collaboration among folks from diverse backgrounds helps us account for our blind spots. However, to make that collaboration possible, we need an accessible tool. The new topic modeler is that tool — designed so that anyone in the Feedly community can help curate a dataset to train Feedly AI about topics they’re passionate about.

A peek inside the topic modeler tool

The topic modeler takes advantage of the Feedly UI we know and love to allow multiple users to search for articles for the training set and review Feedly AI’s learning progress. Our goal is to connect with experts in a variety of fields to build robust topics that represent our entire community — not just the engineering team.

Put to the test: the diversity topic

Recently, two Feedly team members with no machine learning experience and who are interested in diversity issues road tested the new tool to redesign our diversity topic. The result is a topic that is rich and nuanced: rather than focusing only on the buzzword “diversity,” Feedly AI will be looking for thousands of related keywords, including representation, inclusion, bias, discrimination, equal rights, and intersectionality. Now you can train Feedly AI to track diversity and inclusion progress in your industry and find essential information for how to build and maintain inclusive work cultures and hiring practices.

Feedly AI prioritizes diversity in your Science feed

Feedly AI continuously learns

Topic modeling is not the only way to collaborate. Any Feedly user can help Feedly AI learn. When Feedly AI is wrong, you can use the ‘Less Like This’ down arrow button to let it know that an article it’s prioritized isn’t about a particular subject.

Feedly AI will also seek your feedback occasionally via a prompt at the top of an article. If you see “Is this article about [topic]?,” let it know! Your feedback gets incorporated into Feedly AI’s training set to fill in any gaps we missed and strengthen his understanding.

Your feedback helps fine-tune Feedly AI’s understanding

Join the movement

Beyond in-app feedback, feel free to reach out via email or join the Feedly Community Slack channel, especially if you have a topic for Feedly AI to learn about. This is the tip of the iceberg when it comes to addressing and dismantling systemic bias. We take our role as content mediators seriously and know that we are indebted to those who have fought for so long to bring these issues to our attention. Feedly AI is listening and learning.

Get newsletters in Feedly

Por Annie Bacher
Declutter your inbox and read without distractions

Newsletters are quickly becoming the best way to get curated insights on specific topics, trends, or industries. But inboxes aren’t the best place for focused reading. Keeping up with newsletters in your inbox can be a disorganized, distracting, and overwhelming experience. 

That’s why you can now get newsletters in Feedly. Keep up with the topics and trends that matter to you, without all the distractions.

I used to miss a lot of newsletters in my inbox because they would come at different times of day, and they would get put into different folders. Now that I get newsletters in Feedly, I can organize them into one single stream. I can capture and analyze all the content I need.

Arthur West, Founder of NoCodeDevs

Start getting newsletters in Feedly

Get your email newsletters in Feedly so you can read without distractions and declutter your inbox. Now available to all users in our Pro+ plan.

GET NEWSLETTERS IN FEEDLY

Subscribe to newsletters with Feedly email addresses

You can now add newsletters to your feeds in Feedly and organize them just like any other source. This feature is available for all Pro+ and Enterprise users. 

In the Feedly Web app, click ‘+’ in the left navigation bar and choose the ‘Newsletters’ tab to get started.

Click ‘+’ in the left navigation bar and choose the ‘Newsletters’ tab to generate a unique email address for this newsletter. Use that email address to subscribe to the newsletter and get it delivered to your Feedly.

Let’s imagine you are the Director of Operations at an e-commerce company and you need to follow the Exponential View newsletter to keep up with news about retail, business and tech. Here’s how you would get the Exponential View newsletter in Feedly:

  1. Click the ‘+’ button in the left navigation bar and choose the ‘Newsletters’ tab.
  2. Generate a unique Feedly email address. 
  3. Use the Feedly email address to subscribe to the newsletter.
  4. Assign a name to the newsletter source and choose a feed that you want it to be delivered to.
  5. Success! The content from this newsletter will now be delivered to your Feedly. 

If the newsletter has a double opt-in (to confirm your email address), the confirmation email will be sent to your Feedly, and you’ll have to click the confirmation link before you can receive newsletter content. 

We recommend using a different email address for each newsletter so that you can organize them easily in your feeds. 

Organize and read newsletters with the rest of your content 

Once you’ve added newsletters to your feeds, you can organize, read, and annotate them just like any other source.

This user added the Exponential newsletter to a “Thinkers” feed. They can now skim content from Exponential with the rest of the content in that feed.

If you use Feedly with your team, you can add newsletter content to Team Boards and add notes or highlights to call out the important parts.

Easily read and annotate the content of your newsletters.

I now have a one-stop information hub. I can save time when reading essential information from newsletters on Feedly rather than being distracted by other emails.

Mac Feith, Customer Service Specialist

Leverage Feedly AI to prioritize must-reads 

To keep your reading even more focused, use Feedly AI, to filter out any noise and surface the most valuable content for you. 

Train Feedly AI to prioritize the most important topics, trends, competitors, or events in your newsletter content. 

Or, train Feedly AI to mute topics you don’t care about. 

Train Feedly AI to prioritize “artificial intelligence” in newsletters you get in Feedly.

Get newsletters in Feedly

Inboxes aren’t the best place for focused reading. Get your email newsletters in Feedly so you can read without the distractions. Now available to all users in our Pro+ plan.

GET NEWSLETTERS IN FEEDLY

FAQs about getting newsletters in Feedly

Why can’t I subscribe to new newsletters in the Feedly mobile app? 

Right now, you can only follow new newsletters in the Feedly Web app.

You can still read existing newsletters on mobile. We’re working on the newsletter functionality in the mobile app, and you should be able to follow new newsletters on mobile in the next 2-3 months.

How can I subscribe to a newsletter that requires me to log in to the website first?

You can log in to the website with your real email address. Once you subscribe, set up a rule in your email application to forward the newsletter to your Feedly email. You can then delete it from your email inbox.

Can I automatically forward existing newsletters from my inbox to Feedly

Yes, you can. Generate a Feedly email address and create a forward rule in your email application to forward your existing newsletters to that Feedly email address. 

Forwarded newsletter emails will show up in your Feedly. We recommend generating one email address per newsletter so that you can easily organize newsletters in your Feedly as individual sources.

Can I import newsletters from my email?

Currently, you can’t import newsletters from your email. However, you can forward newsletters directly from your email (instead of resubscribing on the newsletter website). Generate a Feedly email address and create a rule in your email application to forward each newsletter.

How many newsletters can I subscribe to in Feedly?

Pro+ users can follow up to 50 newsletters and Enterprise users can follow up to 200 newsletters.

Can I subscribe to multiple newsletters with the same generated Feedly email address?

Yes, but it is not recommended. We recommend subscribing to newsletters with unique Feedly email addresses for each newsletter so you can then organize them into your Feeds.

How can I unsubscribe from a newsletter I added to my Feeds?

To unsubscribe from a newsletter, right-click on the newsletter source in the left navigation bar, and click ‘Unfollow’.

Does following a newsletter in Feedly impact the analytics of the newsletter publisher?

No. When you open and read a newsletter in Feedly, the content creator gets the same analytics as when you open and read the newsletter in your inbox.

The new Cybersecurity Trending Dashboard

Por Edwin K
Get at-a-glance overview of the evolving cybersecurity threat landscape, even if you only have a few minutes

Keeping up with the most critical threats, vulnerabilities, and threat actors can be time consuming and overwhelming.

We have been working with some existing Feedly for Cybersecurity customers to create a trending dashboard that offers an at-a-glance overview of the evolving cybersecurity threat landscape.

The Cybersecurity Dashboard is now available for all Feedly for Cybersecurity customers.

Here’s a quick walkthrough of what you can find on the Cybersecurity Dashboard.

Trending threats

The first component of the Trending Dashboard is a list of the trending threats reported across 1,200 different cybersecurity sources (news sites, blogs, or Twitter accounts).

You can find the Cybersecurity Dashboard in your left navigation bar, in the “Dashboards” section.

The Cybersecurity Dashboard allows you to get a quick overview of what are the critical threats that are being reported across all the cybersecurity sites the Feedly community is reading. Think of it like a TechMeme for Cybersecurity.

The model producing this dashboard is focusing on the news published in the last 24 hours.

Behind the scenes, Feedly AI reads all the articles across all the cybersecurity sources and Twitter accounts. Leo dismisses articles that are not about cybersecurity threats, clusters the ones that are reporting the same threat, and ranks them using different “features”.

The initial model we are pushing to beta is a global model. This means that your personal priorities and mute filters are not affecting this model (yet!).

Trending vulnerabilities

The second component of the Cybersecurity Dashboard is a list of the trending vulnerabilities that are being discovered or discussed across cybersecurity sources.

You can click on a specific vulnerability and drill down to a page that captures all the mentions and chatter around that vulnerability.

Click on any of the trending vulnerabilities and view a CVE Insights Card with the chatter about a specific vulnerability

Trending threat actors

The last component is a list of trending threat actor mentions. It allows you to get an overview of which threat actors are being covered in the news.

You can click on a specific threat actor and get a “Search across the Web” overview of the mentions.

Click on any threat actor in the Dashboard to see the chatter about that specific threat actor

Continuously learning and getting smarter

Every component has a “Less Like This” down arrow button that you can use to provide feedback to Feedly AI. The feedback is going to be reviewed by the product team during the beta to understand how to improve the relevance, deduplication, and prioritization. Feedly AI loves candid feedback.

Use the Less ‘Like This’ button to offer Feedly AI feedback

We look forward to listening to your feedback and continuously improving the Cybersecurity Dashboard.

We also want to thank the customers who suggested this feature and worked with us during the Alpha. You know who you are!

Can I personalize the Cybersecurity Dashboard?

Not in the current version. Once we have the core model optimized, we will look at ways to allow you personalize the dashboard by industry, product, threat types.

What is the best way to offer feedback to the product team during the beta?

If you have feedback regarding specific articles or CVEs, please use the’ Less Like This’ button to submit your feedback. If you have ideas on how to improve the AI Model, please email enterprise@feedly.com.

How can I get a demo of Feedly for Cybersecurity?

If you are part of a cybersecurity team and want to get a demo of how Feedly for Cybersecurity can help you streamline your open-source intelligence, you can request a demo and a free trial here.

Can I access the Cybersecurity Trending Dashboard in the Feedly mobile app?

Not yet. The beta is only available in the Feedly Web application. We will integrate this feature into the mobile experience once the beta is complete.

Five industry newsletters the Feedly community loves to read

Por Annie Bacher
Find your next must-read industry newsletter

Where do you go when you’re hungry for curated insights in a specific industry? Newsletters! 

Newsletters are the best place to get curated insights and in-depth analysis from experts. You get the best industry-specific news, without having to slog through social media to find insights on trends and competitors. 

Plus, now that you can get newsletters delivered to Feedly, we want to help you find quality industry newsletters that you can add to your feeds. We’re sharing 5 major industry newsletters with quality content and deep analysis, so you can find your next great read. 

Get newsletters in Feedly

Unclog your inbox and read without distractions. Now available to all users in our Pro+ plan.

GET NEWSLETTERS IN FEEDLY

Robinhood Snacks (Finance)

“Your daily dose of financial news: The 3-minute newsletter with fresh takes on the financial news you need to start your day.” 

Robinhood Snacks is a mix of financial, business, and market news with a smart, punny tone.

Each piece of news includes an in-depth story and a key takeaway that helps you get the highlights. We especially appreciate how the plentiful emojis, GIFs, and snack puns make the newsletter easy to scan and keep things light in an industry that’s not always considered “fun.”

Petr, Customer Success Manager at Feedly, says “Robinhood Snacks helps me get the bigger picture about what to invest in. The other day, I liked how they analyzed the strategies behind two up-and-coming startups and gave a valuable takeaway.”

Axios Vitals (Health care)

“Keep up with health care politics, policy and business, by health care reporter Caitlin Owens.”

The daily Axios Vitals newsletter starts with “1 big thing” that goes deep on a timely piece of health care news. The rest of the newsletter includes a variety of topics that intersect with different sub-sectors in health care: the impact of the economic environment on people’s health, scientific research, and drug discovery. You’ll find background knowledge and analysis so you can take away plenty of talking points. 

Especially during the overwhelming news cycle of the pandemic, Axios Vitals is a great place to look for quality coronavirus-related news.

Idea 57 (Media and entertainment)

“Atlantic Media’s weekly newsletter on the business of media.” 

Settle in with a cup of coffee and (or tea): this is a long one. Written by Atlantic Media’s strategy research team, Idea 57 covers a wide range of areas in the media and entertainment industry, including digital media, publishers, social media, traditional media. 

Each story includes a well-researched explanation and snapshots for easy consumption. You’ll find plenty of links to external content and videos so you can fall down a rabbit hole on a specific topic.

Retail Brew (Retail)

“Stay up to date on the retail industry. All the news and insights retail pros need to know, all in one newsletter.”

“There’s so much happening in retail, but there isn’t a single source that curates retail news with a sense of humor.” said journalist Halie LeSavage to MediaPost when Retail Brew launched earlier in 2020.

Retail Brew now gives readers direct access to retail news—with a dose of humor. It was created by the team behind the popular Morning Brew newsletter.

Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, LeSavage writes stories that are both entertaining and informative for a variety of readers: from grocers to direct-to-consumer companies and small businesses. Stories are about everything from Black Friday and Cyber Monday news to pet subscription boxes.

Airline Economics Online (Travel and hospitality)

“Airline Economics is the leading and largest finance & leasing global publication for the aviation sector, reaching industry professionals from lessors, investors, banks, airlines, law firms & MROs.”

The daily Airline Economics newsletter gets granular. In a time when airline news is moving so fast, it’s the place to keep up with everything from financials and acquisition news to regulatory news and changes in airline leadership. You’ll find deep analysis on new routes, schedule changes, and airport plans, and innovation trends, like General Motors’ recent investment in flying cars.

Other lists we like 

There are so many quality newsletters out there. There’s also a lot of noise. To help you find even more newsletters where you can keep up with the topics and trends in your industry, check out 15 Newsletters That Will Make You Smarter and More Successful in 2020

For tech newsletters, we like CodeinWP’s list of  12 of the Best Tech Newsletters to Subscribe to in 2020.

Industry newsletters, delivered to Feedly

You can now get your favorite industry newsletters in Feedly so you can read without distractions. Now available to all users in our Pro+ plan.

GET NEWSLETTERS IN FEEDLY

Follow Reddit in Feedly

Por Annie Bacher
New Feature
Pull content from subreddits and searches directly into your Feedly feeds

Reddit is “home of thousands of communities, endless conversations, and authentic human connection.” It can be an amazing resource for finding the best insights on topics and trends you care about. But it can also be overwhelming and time-consuming. 

That’s why we’re excited to announce the new Reddit integration for Feedly! You can now connect your Reddit account to Feedly and pull content from subreddits and searches directly into your Feedly feeds.

Then, use the power of Leo — your AI research assistant — to surface important Reddit content and filter out noisy posts.

With the Feedly Reddit integration, I really enjoy finding new insights and starting conversations about topics that are key to me. Reddit feeds now belong to my research flow and I can integrate this knowledge into my personal blog and tweets.”

Thomas Deneuville, Interaction Designer

Follow Reddit in Feedly

Find authentic information from Reddit communities to incorporate into your research. Now available for all users in our new Pro+ plan.

TRY THE REDDIT INTEGRATION

Follow subreddits in Feedly 

Subreddits are goldmines of conversations on specific topics. When you add a subreddit as a source in Feedly, you can organize it into a feed alongside any of the 10 other types of sources in Feedly, like news sources, email newsletters, and Twitter.

To get started, Click the ‘+’ button in the left navigation bar and choose the ‘Reddit Feeds’ tab. 

Then, search for your favorite subreddit: enter the subreddit handle or URL.

Click ‘+’ in the left navigation bar and search for subreddits like r/Futurology to add them to your feeds.

Follow Reddit searches

You can follow a Reddit search in Feedly so anytime new content is published that matches your search, you’ll see the new posts in your feeds.

To follow a search, type your Reddit search directly into Feedly’s search bar in the ‘Reddit Feeds’ tab.

You can also create an advanced search query in Reddit. Once you click ‘Search,’ in Reddit, paste the link to the advanced search directly into the search bar in your Feedly.

Follow a Reddit search: Search inside Feedly, or create an advanced search in Reddit and paste the URL of the search in Feedly.

Read linked articles directly in your Feedly 

If a Reddit post links to an article, Leo will pull the content of the article into your Feedly. You can read it, save it to a Board, add Notes or Highlights, or tag a teammate.

When a post links to an article, you can open the article right in Feedly<br>

Train Leo to prioritize specific topics, companies, or business events

Once you’ve set up your sources, it’s time to put Leo, your AI research assistant, to work to help you filter out the noise. 

Leo will read every post published to the subreddits and searches you’ve followed. He’ll put the content mentioning the topics, companies, or business events you prioritize.

Leo will look for your Priorities in both the posts and the articles they link out to. For example, if you prioritize SpaceX (the company), Leo looks through all subreddit posts and any linked articles to find mentions of SpaceX. He’ll add articles mentioning SpaceX to your Priority tab.

Leo reads every Reddit post in this feed and the articles they link out to, and prioritizes the ones mentioning SpaceX.

Train Leo to mute noisy Reddit posts

Just like any other piece of content in Feedly, you can train Leo to mute posts about topics you don’t care about, so you only see essential news in your feeds.

To create a Mute Filter, go to ‘Train Leo’ → ‘Mute Filters’ to mute content about a topic or keyword.

Leo reads both the content of the Reddit post and any linked content to decide whether or not to mute a post.

Leo reads every post published in the selected feed and mutes the ones mentioning iPhone.

Examples of ways to use Reddit in Feedly

Let’s look at some ways Feedly users have used the Reddit integration to stay on top of updates in their industries:

A journalist wants to stay on top of updates in the finance business industry

To incorporate authentic conversations into her research about the finance business industry, this journalist added a Reddit search for “blockchain” in their “Finance Business” feed.

An HR manager wants to keep up with insights and opinions on company benefits

To stay on top of people’s opinions of company benefits and work/life balance, an HR manager followed subreddits about the company, and subreddits about the areas like r/HumanResources and r/CareerSuccess.

An angel investor wants to keep up with startups they invest in

To learn as much as possible about the startups they invested in — without spending hours sifting through Reddit — this angel investor followed searches for the names of each startup and added them to a “Startup” feed.

This investor created a Leo Priority for product launches, so that content about product launches related to these startups shows up in their Priority tab.

 

I used to feel like I was missing out on content I care about. I now have much more granular access to communities discussing my similar interests, all aggregated in Feedly.”

Dan Bolivar, Software Manager at Pariveda Solutions

Lists we like

Looking for good subreddits to follow? Here’s some inspiration:

Follow Reddit in Feedly

Find authentic information from Reddit communities to incorporate into your research. Now available for all users in our new Pro+ plan.

TRY THE REDDIT INTEGRATION

 FAQs about the Reddit integration

How do I get started with the Reddit integration? What can I follow?

Anyone on a Feedly Pro+, Business, or Enterprise plan has access to the Reddit integration.

To get started, click the ‘+’ icon in the left navigation bar and choose the Reddit Feeds tab. You can follow keywords, subreddits, or Reddit searches.

Can I follow my own Reddit homepage?

Yes. If you want to follow the homepage you see when you go to reddit.com, then type “https://www.reddit.com/” into the Feedly search bar. The homepage of the Reddit account that’s connected to your Feedly account will be pulled in as a source.

How can I follow the top Reddit posts in Feedly?

Search for “https://www.reddit.com/top”, you should see a source for the top (most upvoted) posts from your Reddit subscriptions.

Search for “https://www.reddit.com/best” and you’ll see a source for the best posts (the most upvoted, with the fewest downvotes) from your Reddit subscriptions.

What’s the limit for posts from Reddit per day?

Feedly has a limit of 5,000 posts per day from each Reddit source.

Why are you offering this new Reddit Integration?

The old Reddit integration wasn’t reliable — some Reddit sources didn’t update, and some updated only sporadically. The new integration uses the Reddit API, which allows each user to reliably follow subreddits and Reddit searches. Reddit sources will be updated every 10 minutes.

Feedly is hiring a VP Marketing

Por Edwin K

We are looking for a π-shaped VP Marketing with a proven track record of driving growth in an early stage B2B SaaS environment. You will be responsible for developing and executing the Feedly marketing strategy. It is a unique opportunity to significantly impact the growth trajectory of an exciting startup that is transforming how 15M+ curious minds research and consume information.

Goals

A major focus for this role is to accelerate the growth of Feedly Pro+ and Feedly Enterprise and increase the awareness of Leo (Feedly’s new AI research assistant) with analysts, influencers, and the press.

Responsibilities

  • Collaborate with the product management team to conduct user research and develop market positioning and messaging for key verticals and customer personas.
  • Work cross-functionally with teammates across the company to launch new features on time and at a high quality bar.
  • Grow pipeline and sales qualified opportunities through the creation of high-quality and scalable demand generation campaigns.
  • Develop marketing assets (presentations, blog posts, case studies, white papers, and webinars) for our demand generation campaigns and sales process. 
  • Establish data-oriented practices to optimize performance and continually improve the efficiency and impact of marketing channels.
  • Develop strong relationships with analysts (Gartner, Forrester, etc.) and regularly brief them about Feedly’s unique value proposition.
  • Grow and lead the product marketing team.

Helpful skills and experience

  • You have 5+ years of marketing and demand generation experience with a proven track record of growing revenue from $5M to $25M ARR.
  • You are a self-starter with the ability to work independently, articulate a vision, and execute it.
  • You have strong communication, story-telling, and presentation skills.
  • You love to translate complex concepts into clearly articulated messaging.
  • You write exceptionally well (including go-to-market materials and customer case studies).
  • You have experience designing sales collaterals from scratch based on sales conversations, sales calls, product interviews, user interviews, market research, and your own experience.
  • You have experience leading product launches, from crafting messaging to managing the launch tactics.
  • You have experience presenting to analysts and the press.
  • You have strong analytical skills and make data-driven decisions based on thorough analysis of campaign performances.
  • You are a team player and have a growth mindset.

Benefits

  • Competitive salary & equity
  • Remote working: Feedly is a remote-first startup, located in the San Francisco Bay Area. We believe in doing work we love, from places we love! Whether you prefer to work from home or an office, we support with coworking costs and a solid home-office setup.
  • Flexible hours: We believe that performance should be measured on output, and not when and how you work, so at Feedly, you will find a lot of flexibility to design your own rhythm of work.
  • A social work-life: We are a small and sociable group. We make an effort to stay connected with Zoom team kick-offs every week, 1-1s, and social catch-ups over games. Post Covid we expect to meet up every quarter for a few days of workshops and fun.
  • Growth mindset: We think learning is key to winning so we have created a learning budget of $1,200 per person to spend on courses, conferences, coaching or whatever you think will help you improve and grow.
  • Gym perk: Feedly supports healthy and balanced lifestyles and will refund up to $120 per month in “gym and other sport-related” expenses
  • Health insurance: Feedly offers and pays for medical, dental and vision coverage for all our employees and their dependents.

About Feedly

Manually keeping up with the topics and trends you care about is tedious and overwhelming.

Feedly is an AI-powered research tool that allows individuals and organizations to track key industry trends, without the overwhelm.

We serve 15 million individuals and 2,000 organizations. 

Feedly is a remote-first, self-funded, fast-growing, and profitable startup, located in the San Francisco Bay Area. 

We’re a small and ambitious team that works closely in sync while each taking real ownership of our respective areas.

Our mission is to make Leo the world’s most helpful AI research assistant.

Rev1 spots investment opportunities sooner while cutting research time in half

Por Annie Bacher
Case Study
How a VC firm uses Feedly to keep a finger on the pulse of the startup ecosystem
Impact
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Deeper understanding of emerging trends in foodtech, insurtech, enterprise software, and digital health

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Able to spot new investment opportunities that might otherwise have been overlooked

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No more information overload:
70% noise reduction, 5 hours saved per week

The Client
Leading investor startup studio Rev1 Ventures

Columbus, OH, USA
Started using Feedly: September 2018

Rev1 is an investor startup studio that combines capital and strategic services to help startups scale and corporations innovate. The company focuses on industries including enterprise software, data analytics, fintech, insurtech, digital health, and life science.

Since we track market sectors, news about the latest funding rounds, and product launches, we have been able to identify new companies worth looking at through our Feedly Feeds. Before, we could’ve easily read right past it or missed it with all of the noise.

Matt Chimes, Director of Rev1 Ventures

The Challenge
Keeping up with industry intelligence was a manual, repetitive process. “You end up with a lot of tabs saved for later.”

Keeping up with the startup ecosystem

Rev1 needs to keep up with industry trends to identify emerging market opportunities and technologies for investment. They also want to provide timely information and deep domain expertise to startups that could benefit from their years of industry knowledge. Staying on top of various industries and where they are heading takes a lot of time to research and monitor.

Sifting for contextually relevant information took up too much time

Before finding Feedly, Rev1 had a system for keeping up with industry trends. But, it involved manual processes, like jumping from website to website, opening tabs, bookmarking for later, and sifting through headlines for relevant news. Rev1’s process relied on finding news from known publications and experts in their network. They wanted to reduce blind spots and avoid missing key information on the latest trends.

Aggregating and sharing articles across the team was a clunky process

To send a weekly newsletter with relevant news and insights, Rev1 kept a system of bookmarks and email drafts to aggregate key snippets and links. It worked, but they would rather spend that time synthesizing the information than organizing it. They started looking for tools that would help consolidate their efforts, parse for relevant information, and share insights.

“It’s counterproductive because you’d rather spend time synthesizing relevant information versus looking for it. We were looking for tools that could help us streamline those efforts and consolidate sources for specific topics of interest.”

The Solution
An AI-powered intelligence hub

First, Matt and his team organized all their sources in one place

When Rev1 started using Feedly as a team, they first organized their trusted sources for industry insights into a set of Feeds relevant to their focus areas — foodtech, insurtech, and digital health to name a few. Consolidating this information brought everyone — from partners to analysts — to one central location where they could find and share industry insights.

Rev1’s Team Feeds — collections of information sources the whole team has access to.

In Rev1’s foodtech Feed, they follow:

Then Rev1 asked Feedly AI to spot relevant insurtech topics, trends, and startups

Matt and Rev1 wanted to refine the information that showed up in their Feeds and filter out the signal from the noise. That’s where Feedly AI came in.

In their insurtech Feed, Rev1 asked Feedly AI to look for significant business events like funding rounds related to claims, underwriting, or P&C insurance. With the Business Event AI Model, Feedly AI looks for mergers & acquisitions, new product launches, or fundraising events. If an insurtech startup raised a $10 million funding round, Rev1 would know about it.

Rev1 set up AI Feeds for funding events related to claims, underwriting, or P&C insurance.

Matt created a Mute Filter to get rid of noise. Feedly AI now removes anything related to health insurance in their insurtech Feed.

Let’s say something new happens in Singapore and has nothing to do with property and casualty insurance. Maybe it’s health insurance-related. How do you filter out those articles from the topic of focus? That’s what we try to accomplish with Mute Filters.

Matt also used a Like Board Feed to ask Feedly AI to spot articles similar to ones they had already saved in their “Insurtech Opportunities” Board. This helps Rev1 cover blind spots if an industry-relevant article is published by an unbeknownst source.

They started sharing research findings with Team Boards

Matt created Team Boards around topics like insurtech, healthcare, foodtech, Venture Capital, and Columbus, OH startups. He used these shared spaces to save articles, add Notes and Highlights, and tag teammates that should see specific content.

Team Boards make it easy for everyone in the company to stay aligned on the topics that are most important to the business.

We centralized our favorite sources for relevant topics and no longer have to keep 30+ different web tabs for later. Then, we asked Feedly AI to sift through the information to spot contextually relevant information based on topics we care about. Thinking about where things are at now, it’s an elegant, well-oiled machine.”

Matt Chimes, Director of Rev1 Ventures

The Results
50% time saved on industry research, 70% less noise, and a closer eye on investment opportunities

Before Feedly, Rev1’s manual curation process felt like swimming upstream against a flood of information. By optimizing their information gathering process and taking advantage of Feedly AI’s ability to filter and prioritize, they cut research time by 50%.

“We were able to cut our research time in half. Time equates to cost savings, being able to spend time elsewhere, focus on our company, and spend time synthesizing the information instead of just pulling it.”

Using Feedly Feeds meant that Rev1 could follow general publications like TechCrunch and still get hyper-focused information

Before Feedly AI, the Rev1 team would also scan broad sources like TechCrunch or VentureBeat for pertinent articles. These publications cover a wide variety of industries beyond insurtech, so parsing through the information would take some time.

But by setting up AI Feeds for the specific topics they care about (for example: insurance innovation), Feedly AI will place topically relevant articles on Rev1’s feed. They can now continue to follow wide-reaching sources like TechCrunch with a keen eye for industry-specific intelligence.

Finding investment opportunities and partnerships through Feedly

Now that the Rev1 team doesn’t spend hours wading through open browser tabs and email chains full of links, they have more time to focus on the content of the news. With refined Feeds and sources, Rev1 can keep a much closer eye on who to invest in and which partnerships to pursue.

The smarter Feedly AI gets, the more Rev1 can synthesize and share information. Matt’s excited about the possibilities: “We set the foundation for something that could be highly-efficient and effective moving forward.”

We’re able to stay up to date with the latest trends. We have more actionable, up-to-date information as a result. We’ve saved time because of the quality of information that Feedly AI has prioritized for us.”

Matt Chimes, Director of Rev1 Ventures

Streamline your industry research workflow

Keep up with funding events, startup trends, and innovations in your industry — without the overwhelm.

TRY FEEDLY ENTERPRISE

Maintenance on March 27th, 2021 completed

Por Edwin K

Hello everyone,

We are planning a scheduled downtime Saturday (March 27th) at 10:00am.

We are polishing the infrastructure for an important new beta launch in April.

You can follow live updates on Twitter: https://twitter.com/feedly

The maintenance was successfully completed at 5:00pm.

Thank you for your patience.

Update Log:

Update at 10:15am: The maintenance started.

Update at 12:15pm: The team has made good progress. All the components we want to upgrade/reboot have been upgraded. We need a bit more time to finalize our network tests before we can restore the service. Thank you for your patience. We should be able to give you an ETA in 30min.

Update at 12:45pm: The team needs a bit more time to replicate some data. Thank you for your patience. We should be able to give you an ETA in 60min.

Update at 2:45pm: The data has been replicated. The team is running some tests to make sure that all the content is consistent. As soon as this operation is complete, we should have an ETA. Next update in 60-90min. Thanks for your patience.

Update at 4:15pm: Thanks for your patience everyone! We are making sure that everything is working correctly before we get the app back online. We have done 90% of the tests. One of them is taking longer than we expected but the team is making good progress. More very soon.

Update at 4:45pm: Thanks again for your patience. The service is back online. A big thank you to the DevOps team for pulling off this major upgrade. Have a wonderful weekend!

Happy reading!

-Seb, Oliv, Kireet, David, and Edwin

Follow Reddit in Feedly

Por Annie Bacher
Pull content from Reddit communities and searches directly into your Feeds

Reddit is “home of thousands of communities, endless conversations, and authentic human connection.” It can be an amazing resource for finding the best insights on topics and trends you care about.

That’s why we’re excited to announce the new Reddit integration for Feedly! You can now connect your Reddit account to Feedly and pull content from communities and searches directly into your Feeds.

Then, use the power of Feedly AI to surface important Reddit content and filter out noisy posts.

With the Feedly Reddit integration, I really enjoy finding new insights and starting conversations about topics that are key to me. Reddit feeds now belong to my research flow and I can integrate this knowledge into my personal blog and tweets.”

Thomas Deneuville, Interaction Designer

Follow Reddit in Feedly

Find authentic information from Reddit communities to incorporate into your research. Now available for Feedly users on all plans.

TRY THE REDDIT INTEGRATION

Follow Reddit communities in Feedly 

Reddit communities are goldmines for conversations on specific topics. When you add a Reddit community as a source in Feedly, you can organize it into a Feed alongside any of the 10 other types of sources in Feedly, like news sources, email newsletters, and Twitter.

To get started, Click the ‘+’ button in the left navigation bar and choose the ‘Reddit Feeds’ tab. 

After you connect your Reddit account, you can search for your favorite community. Enter the community name or URL in the search bar, for example: Futurology or reddit.com/r/Futurology/.

Click ‘+’ in the left navigation bar and search for Reddit communities like r/Futurology to add them to your Feeds.

Follow Reddit searches

You can follow a Reddit search in Feedly so anytime new content is published that matches your search, you’ll see the new posts in your Feeds.

To follow a search, type your Reddit search directly into the search bar in the ‘Reddit Feeds’ tab.

You can also create an advanced search query in Reddit and then paste the finished URL of the search into Feedly.

Follow a Reddit search: Search inside Feedly, or create an advanced search in Reddit and paste the URL of the search into your search bar in Feedly.

Read linked articles directly in your Feedly 

If a Reddit post links to an article, Feedly AI will pull the content of the article into your Feedly. You can read it, save it to a Board, add Notes or Highlights, or tag a teammate.

When a post links to an article, you can open the article right in Feedly<br>

Ask Feedly AI to prioritize specific topics, companies, or business events

Once you’ve set up your sources, it’s time to put Feedly AI to work to help you filter out the noise. 

Feedly AI will read every post published to the Reddit communities and searches you’ve followed. He’ll put the content mentioning the topics, companies, or business events you prioritize.

Feedly AI will look for your Priorities in both the posts and the articles they link out to. For example, if you prioritize SpaceX (the company), Feedly AI looks through all community posts and any linked articles to find mentions of SpaceX. It’ll add articles mentioning SpaceX to your Priority tab.

Feedly AI reads every Reddit post in this Feed and the articles they link out to, and prioritizes the ones mentioning SpaceX.

Ask Feedly AI to mute noisy Reddit posts

Just like any other piece of content in Feedly, you can ask Feedly AI to mute posts about topics you don’t care about, so you only see essential news in your Feeds.

To create a Mute Filter, go to ‘Manage Leo’ → ‘Mute Filters’ to mute content about a topic or keyword.

Feedly AI reads both the content of the Reddit post and any linked content to decide whether or not to mute a post.

Feedly AI reads every post published in the selected Feed and mutes the ones mentioning iPhone.

Examples of ways to use Reddit in Feedly

Let’s look at some ways Feedly users can use the Reddit integration to stay on top of updates in their industries:

A journalist wants to stay on top of updates in the finance business industry

While researching the finance business industry, a journalist can add a Reddit search for “blockchain” in their “Finance Business” Feed to stay on top of authentic conversations related to the topic.

An HR manager wants to keep up with insights and opinions on company benefits

To keep a finger on the pulse of people’s opinions of company benefits and work/life balance, an HR manager can follow Reddit communities about the company, and about areas like r/HumanResources and r/CareerSuccess.

An angel investor wants to keep up with startups they invest in

To learn as much as possible about the startups they invested in — without spending hours sifting through Reddit — an angel investor can follow searches for the names of each startup and add them to a “Startup” Feed. Then, they can layer an AI Model for product launches on top of that “Startup” Feed. Content about product launches related to specific startups will show up in their Priority tab.

I used to feel like I was missing out on content I care about. I now have much more granular access to communities discussing my similar interests, all aggregated in Feedly.”

Dan Bolivar, Software Manager at Pariveda Solutions

Lists we like

Looking for good Reddit communities to follow? Here are some curated collections of communities to follow based on your interests:


Follow Reddit in Feedly

Find authentic information from Reddit communities to incorporate into your research. Now available for Feedly users on all plans.

TRY THE REDDIT INTEGRATION

 FAQs about the Reddit integration

How do I get started with the Reddit integration? What can I follow?

Anyone with a Feedly account (whether you’re on a free, Pro+ or Enterprise plan) has access to the Reddit integration.

To get started, click the ‘+’ icon in the left navigation bar and choose the Reddit Feeds tab. Once you connect your Reddit account, you can follow keywords, communities, or searches.

Can I follow my own Reddit homepage?

Yes. If you want to follow the homepage you see when you go to reddit.com, then type “https://www.reddit.com/” into the Feedly search bar. The homepage of the Reddit account that’s connected to your Feedly account will be pulled in as a source.

How can I follow the top Reddit posts in Feedly?

Search for “https://www.reddit.com/top”, you should see a source for the top (most upvoted) posts from your Reddit subscriptions.

Search for “https://www.reddit.com/best” and you’ll see a source for the best posts (the most upvoted, with the fewest downvotes) from your Reddit subscriptions.

What’s the limit for posts from Reddit per day?

Feedly has a limit of 1,000 posts per day from each Reddit source.

Why are you offering this new Reddit Integration?

The old Feedly + Reddit integration wasn’t reliable — some Reddit sources didn’t update, and some updated only sporadically. The new integration uses the Reddit API, which allows each user to reliably follow Reddit communities and searches. Reddit sources will be updated every 10 minutes.

Research critical vulnerabilities with Leo CVE Intelligence Cards

Por Sarah Hartland
Contextualized CVE information for faster threat research, without the overwhelm

Cyber attacks are increasing in volume and sophistication across every industry and category, leaving threat analysts and frontline security teams faced with a flood of information. The consequences of missing critical information are astronomical, but no human can keep up with this onslaught of data on their own. 

You need relevant, real-time, accurate information – and scrolling through an endless list of sources won’t get you there. That’s why we’re excited to announce that Leo, your AI research assistant, now aggregates information on vulnerabilities, exploits, malware families, and threat actors into a single view so that he can help you proactively track and research CVEs. 

Leo CVE Intelligence Cards gives you at-a-glance visibility into relevant trending vulnerabilities, and you can use Leo to focus any of your feeds for faster insight into risks impacting your business’s software, hardware, and application stack. 

Information overload is real. This is why we enhanced Leo’s cybersecurity knowledge graph so  he can help you proactively track and research critical vulnerabilities and zero-day exploits relevant to you

With Leo, you can prioritize the CVEs that impact your organization’s technology stack and reduce the time it takes to investigate threats by up to 70%. All of this information is available at a glance via Leo CVE Intelligence Cards and throughout your Feeds.

Before using Feedly for Cybersecurity, my biggest challenge was to quickly sort through all the data to find the top CVEs by mention, and track their relationships with exploits, patches, etc. It would take a lot of work to search through unstructured text and large bulk files. With Leo, it’s so much easier to quickly review details of a CVE and its associated relationships.

Michael Rossi, Independent Security Consultant, Cybeta

Leo CVE Intelligence Cards: a complete CVE overview in a glimpse 

If you want to dive deeper into a CVE, exploit, or threat, Leo synthesizes vulnerability, patch, exploit/PoC, malware, and threat actor information into a single CVE Card. Leo eliminates the time you used to spend opening a new browser tab, searching, browsing for the resource you want, and skimming everything individually to find what mattered.

Instead of having dozens of research tabs open in your browser, Leo CVE Intelligence Cards consolidate the information into a single location where you have at-a-glance views of:

  • CVSS score and vector string 
  • CWE
  • Affected systems, including vendor advisories
  • Exploit information
  • Patches
  • Associated malware families
  • Associated threat actors
  • Awareness graph
  • Number of Web and Social Media mentions, including Twitter and Reddit

For new vulnerabilities that don’t have a CVSS assigned yet, Leo uses a proprietary NLP model based on the CVSS v3 methodology to forecast this score. This way, you can spot new threats and take proactive steps in real-time.

Color-coding helps you make quick decisions about the next steps in your investigation. The darker the color on the Awareness graph, the more people are talking about the CVE across the web.

Get complete CVE overviews in a glimpse.

Leo provides links to all the external resources you need to investigate the CVE, so  you can more rapidly respond to threats and improve important cybersecurity metrics like mean time to detection (MTTD), mean time to investigate (MTTI), and mean time to remediate (MTTR). 

Dig deeper, faster, to determine if a specific vulnerability represents a critical risk for your organization based on its technology stack to decide whether to flag the intel and share it with the rest of your team.

For example, you can click on “Affected System” or “Patched” to go directly to those sources like the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) National Vulnerability Database or websites with patches for remediation purposes. 

Click elements on the dashboard for more context and source material.

Before using Feedly for Cybersecurity, it was hard to prioritize which vulnerabilities were more important at a glance and determine if they applied to our networks. Now that we use Leo, we have been saving so much time, it’s much appreciated!

– Feedly for Cybersecurity Customer

Leo can surface relevant critical vulnerabilities across your Feeds

In addition to his interactive CVE Cards, Leo also prioritizes the most recent and talked about CVEs, right on your Today page. Simply click on a CVE name to see the dashboard complete with the information necessary for critical decision-making.

Leo knows cybersecurity because we taught him about CVE, CVSS, exploits, patches, threat actors, and other security intelligence concepts. Leo summarizes the information from various resources including NVD, vendor advisories, blogs, Twitter, and Reddit so you don’t have to check each location, sifting through posts unrelated to the CVE you care about.

The Trending in Cybersecurity dashboard showcases the top 5 trending vulnerabilities.

You can add new Leo Priorities on top of your current feed to add contextual business risk. For example, if your technology stack includes Oracle, Adobe, and Google Chrome, but not Samba, you can refine Leo’s priorities so you only see what’s relevant to your organization. 

Train Leo to prioritize vulnerabilities based on CVSS score to increase the relevance of your feed. Leo can flag risks related to your organization’s unique technology stack so you can out pace attackers.

You can start by training Leo to surface CVE’s based on Qualitative Severity Rating Scale — choose our preset for “high” or specify the CVSS scores to build your organization’s context into what you see.

Training Leo by using “HIGH” in combination with either products or vulnerability types personalizes your feed based on your organization’s unique needs. This lets you focus on the risks specific to your organization, weeding out the information you don’t need.

Surface the critical (CVSS > 8 or CVSS > 5 and exploit) vulnerabilities related to Oracle, Adobe, and Chrome.

All of these features, plus several more, are available as a part of Feedly for Cybersecurity. This package of Leo skills, enterprise features, and advanced knowledge graph access is perfect for cybersecurity teams that need to reduce noise and quickly identify risks. To learn more about any of these features, or start a free 30-day trial, click the link below. 

Try Feedly for Cybersecurity

Save time researching CVEs so you can spend more time securing them.

Start 30 Day Trial

💾

How an Australian energy provider stays on top of critical cyber threats with Feedly

Por Annie Bacher
Case Study
This analyst team designed AI-powered security Feeds in Feedly that proactively alert them about specific topics, threats, and threat actors
Impact
box icon

Discovered a supply chain data breach a week before the public announcement

chart icon

Able to monitor hundreds of suppliers for breaches

target icon

Detected a critical vulnerability within 2 hours of its release and patched it immediately

This Feedly for Cybersecurity client has graciously allowed us to share their story on the condition of anonymity. Client names have been changed.

THE CUSTOMER
This energy provider “helps keep the lights on for customers”

Started using Feedly Cybersecurity: 2020

This Feedly client plays a critical role across the Australian energy sector. In tandem with other market players, they help protect Australia’s national energy supply from cyber attacks. “We help keep the lights on for customers,” says Joe, Cybersecurity Threat Analyst.

THE CHALLENGE
Cybersecurity threat intelligence at human speed is no longer sustainable

The onslaught of information

The world of cyber threat tracking runs on a different clock than human speed. The firehose of cyber news makes it hard for our client’s security analysts to find the signal through the noise. Analysts like Joe and his team struggled to keep up with the onslaught of information. Joe used to manage his own personal spreadsheet of 350 sources of information, which he ranked by tiers based on how trusted they were. But the amount of screen time required to keep up with incoming information and identify trends was unsustainable. “The cyber world is like drinking from a firehose in terms of the information we see,” says Joe.

There’s this concept of cyber time. Last week’s issue is like three years ago. We’re so swamped with information, we don’t have time to dive deep on a lot of stuff.”

– Joe, Cybersecurity Threat Analyst

Ever-changing types of attacks and attackers

As cyber threats and ransomware crews become increasingly sophisticated, the human ability to monitor the cyber threat landscape falls behind. No matter how knowledgeable you are, cybersecurity at human speed can’t keep up with ransomware crews using increasingly complex software to manage their operations. 

For companies like this energy provider, the stakes are high. “If they encrypt our environment, we can’t supply energy to customers,” says Joe. 

A data breach of even the smallest of our client’s vendors could put them at risk, so Joe and his team needed a way to keep an eye on even the smallest of breaches. 

THE SOLUTION
Using AI to flag specific cyber attacks, threats, and vulnerabilities

The analyst team at this company needed better tools to help leverage their time and attention and stop doing manual research. Joe’s team had been using Feedly to aggregate information for years. But when his boss, Oliver, Cyber Security Manager, found out that Feedly’s cybersecurity-specific plan could use AI to flag cyber attacks, threats, and vulnerabilities, they knew they had to try it. 

Organizing their security sources into focused Feeds 

Oliver created Feeds around three main focus areas: renewable energy sources + cybersecurity, critical vulnerabilities, and supply chain threats. 

The team selected sources of information they trusted to track cybersecurity news. Not all articles from their trusted sources concern the energy sector. To filter out cybersecurity news unrelated to the energy sector, they configured Feedly AI to flag articles about the specific areas they care about.

“Before using Feedly AI, we had very generic Feeds. We were just looking for energy and cybersecurity news in our region. But over time, I’ve been able to nuance our requirements over supply chain attacks, like Solar Winds.”

Tracking ransomware in the energy space

For example, the analyst team has always tracked news at the intersection of cybersecurity and the energy sector. But once they started using Feedly for Cybersecurity, they created an AI Feed to flag articles that cover ransomware in the energy industry.

The team created an AI Feed to flag articles about ransomware and the energy industry.

Tracking supply chain attacks

“We were concerned about the supply chain risk for our company,” says Joe. “We talked to our internal procurement team to really understand our top 30 providers, with whom we spend millions of dollars.”

To track supply chain risks, the team selected the exact vendors they work with and created a personalized stream of intelligence to track risks coming from their supply chain. “We were able to turn the list of our top partners into an AI Feed and ask him to flag cyber attacks targeting those partners,” explains Joe. 

The analyst team used the “Feedly Company Lists” feature to track a list of 650 suppliers — from Microsoft to small law offices. Feedly AI now flags articles about cyber attacks on those companies.  

With an AI Feed n place, Feedly AI flags articles about data breaches related to any of the company’s suppliers, so they’ll know when one of the companies in their supply chain is breached or attacked. Feedly AI recognizes most of these names as companies, so he can differentiate if an attack is about Amazon (company) vs. Amazon (the river), for example.

Pushing articles to Slack to share with the local intelligence community 

Beyond their internal intelligence team, Joe and Oliver share information across several platforms with peer organizations cybersecurity teams around the globe. 

When members of Joe’s team save articles to the “Attacks in Energy Sector” Board, they automatically get pushed to a designated channel in Slack.

Joe and Oliver add critical articles to a specific Feedly Board. They’ve connected the Board to the collaboration platforms, so when Joe or his teammates add articles to the Board, their security community will automatically see critical updates. 

The analyst team can add Notes when they save articles to their “Attacks in Energy Sector” Board, and those notes will show up in the designated Slack channel.

THE RESULTS
Staying ahead of the curve

In October 2020, thanks to the work Joe had done to create AI Feeds based on their top 30 suppliers, his team proactively identified a data breach from one of their vendors. 

“Thanks to my supply chain AI Feed in Feedly, we identified that one of our vendors had been breached a week before the company actually officially told us.”

This proactive alerting allowed Joe’s team to inform procurement areas and monitor leak sites to see if any sensitive material had been published. Luckily none had been released, and the issue eventually went away.

In March 2021, Joe checked his Feedly in the morning as usual, and found an F5 breach within two hours of the breach itself. “I was sitting at my desk, and I saw the F5 vulnerability pop up in Feedly. I pushed it out to management, and then there was a massive effort to patch that problem within two days, which was awesome.” 

I was sitting at my desk, and I saw the F5 vulnerability pop up in Feedly. I pushed it out to management, and then there was a massive effort to patch that problem within two days, which was awesome.”

Avoiding information overload

When a vulnerability is exposed, “information overload goes up — you can see how the malware reporting goes up associated with that particular vulnerability” says Joe. In response to an exposed vulnerability, there’s a corresponding increase in exploits. That’s where Feedly comes in. Instead of wading through pages of articles about vulnerabilities and exploits that don’t concern his company, Joe can use Feedly AI to surface vulnerabilities and exploits relevant to them.

“And that’s the power of Feedly. Using the smarts, intelligence, and Feedly AI’s natural language processing to align vulnerabilities with exploits. What pops out at the end is what you need to know, what you need to take action on. Not the noise.”

What’s next: expanding the supply chain tracking 

In late 2020, the analyst team discovered that a smaller supplier was attacked after using a tool with an unpatched vulnerability. Criminals were able to steal data through a File Transfer tool. Our client was spending a relatively small amount of money with this company, so they weren’t on their list of top 30 suppliers, but this made Joe and his team realize they needed to expand their supply chain tracking in Feedly. 

The more they personalize their Feeds with help from Feedly AI, the more our client’s security analysts can stay focused on the real threats. As Joe trusts Feedly more and more, he can focus on the high level analysis, and rely on Feedly AI ‘s natural language processing to do the tedious work for him. 

Joe is excited for the possibilities to get even more proactive with upcoming Feedly features. In addition to their supply chain tracking project, the analyst team plans to use the Feedly API to push alerts directly to their internal intelligence platform, which will make it even easier to focus on threats.

From a proactive monitoring perspective, the power of using Feedly is to actually inform you of breaches before anyone else knows.”

More proactive threat intelligence. Less noise.

Streamline your threat intelligence in Feedly so you can focus on real threats and ignore the distractions.

start 30 day trial

Leo’s Vendor Advisory Integrations for Cybersecurity Teams

Por Sarah Hartland
What's New
Leo is now integrated with 15 vendor advisories, giving you real-time access to relevant CVE and CVSS information, directly in your feed.

TRanscript
New Leo CVE Skill – Vendor Advisory Integrations

“Hi folks, this is Remi from Feedly. I wanted to share with you the latest updates on the Leo cybersecurity skills, which has to do with vendor advisory integration. Very exciting one.

The premise for this is that we’ve heard from a lot of our customers that connecting Leo’s knowledge graph directly to vendor advisory sites would be highly beneficial to get updates on CVEs faster, basically immediately as they get published on those vendor sites.

So we built it as you can see, we started integration with the most prominent vendor sites, as you can see here. So we’ve got our Microsoft, Oracle, Cisco if you have any vendor of choice that is not in this list, please let us know because we’re continuously adding more vendor sites to to the knowledge graph. Your feedback is important and will be taken into consideration.

To show you what that looks like, if you take a look at your Today page and your CVE dashboard and your trending vulnerabilities on the right hand side, you can zoom in to this latest vulnerability for Microsoft from a couple of days ago. Click on the CVSS score, which just normally just opens up the NVD page for that vulnerability, you can see that at the NVD level, this is still under undergoing analysis. And there isn’t much detail about it yet on the Phoebe side of things.

Thanks to Leo, you still have all of the elements that appear over here, as well as your usual reference articles and all the chatter around that particular CVE. This is because Leo is picking up that information directly from the Microsoft site and makes all of these updates again, almost in real time. So the outcome of this is that you can really be aware of what’s happening around these critical vulnerabilities sooner without having to go individually to all these other sites and looking up IDs.”

Which vendor advisories does Leo integrate with already?

Tenable, Mozilla, Google Android, Microsoft MSRC, Cisa, Google Chrome, F5, Cisco, Apple, Redhat, zdi, CERT/CC, Oracle, Rapid7, Palo Alto Networks, Dell, Adobe, Apache, Checkpoint, IBM, Siemens, Juniper, Jenkins, OpenVPN AS, Apache Tomcat, ElasticSearch, Google Cloud, NGINX, Haproxy, SAP, CNA vendors NVD, ISC, Netapp, Atlassian

I don’t see a vendor advisory I need on this list – can you add it?

Yes! Contact your Customer Success Manager and we are happy to connect additional vendor advisories for you.

How one tech exec used Feedly to power his passion project

Por Sarah Hartland
Case Study
Steve Makofsky shares how Feedly has become part of his newsletter creation workflow

When the world went into lockdown back in March 2020, Steve Makofsky, like many of us, was feeling a little restless. 

Steve, a long-time tech executive (Disney, Nike), is an engineer with a passion for streamlining his workflow and feeding his mind. Could he find a quarantine project that allowed him to do both while keeping up with his insane to-do list? With a little ingenuity (and the help of Feedly), the answer turned out to be yes. 

Searching for a signal in a sea of noise 

Back in the day Steve, a tech old-timer, stayed up to date via blogs. As a reader he found it easy to discover interesting new perspectives simply by checking the blog rolls of his favorite writers and visiting the sites they recommended. As the author of a couple of books on programming he also blogged himself to drive interest towards his work. 

But as the Internet evolved, Steve found less and less value in blogs. He still dug around online for useful takes and fresh voices, but it felt a whole lot harder to find them. “Something has been lost in blogging,” he says. “I found discovery of similar content to what I like, or maybe opposing views to challenge some of my ideas, has been a real struggle.” 

As a service to a small group of friends and colleagues facing similar challenges, Steve began sending out an ‘annual report’ listing resources they might find interesting. He often received grateful notes in reply. Then, coronavirus struck and Steve found himself with time on his hands. He wondered if he couldn’t supercharge his ‘annual report,’ turning it into a weekly newsletter offering links to great resources from around the web. 

Squeezing a passion project into a jam-packed schedule 

Steve has an extremely busy day job, which means he needed to find an efficient way to discover and process content for his new passion project. Enter Feedly, stage right. He began supplementing his existing feeds with content he discovered using Feedly AI, as well as scouring Twitter and Reddit for interesting sources. 

He also subscribed to a number of Substack newsletters, which he’s happy to aggregate with the rest of his content via Feedly, sparing his inbox further clutter. “I’m glad I don’t have 83 things hit my inbox every day anymore,” he laughs. Steve then uses Feedly to sort all these insights into topical feeds like ‘Mind Changers’ (for writers that often shift his perspective) and ‘Workflow’ (for time-saving tips). (You can read a deeper diver into his aggregation process here.)  

It’s an incoming river of content, but Steve has designed a streamlined system for winnowing it down to just the ten or so links he includes in his weekly newsletter

“Every two or three days, I have a reminder to clean out my to-read list. I carve out 30 minutes in the evening to read some stuff. By the end of the week, I end up with 30 or 40 tagged items. I spend Friday night really going through them, getting the pulse of what I want to talk about, and limiting them down to ten,” he explains. 

A bit of clever automation Steve built allows him to export his top links, along with their headlines, into a template. After another 30 minutes of summarizing and polishing, he’s ready to hit send on his weekly newsletter of suggested links. 

Steve’s blog, ‘Makoism’

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Sorry, sourdough

All together that adds up to no more than a few hours a week for Steve’s newsletter side project, but he’s seen sizable benefits from this modest investment of time. First, recipients seem genuinely appreciative. “Oddly enough, it is gathering an audience,” he says of his weekly updates. “I did not expect that. I just write pretty authentically, but it seems to resonate with people.”  

Perhaps even more importantly, Steve believes the project not only kept him occupied in quarantine but also gives him a leg up professionally. 

“The process has kept me in tune with what’s going on around me with technology. I’ll sit around with my colleagues and I’ll be talking about something they don’t know about. So it enables me to keep up with what’s up and coming. It’s good mental exercise.” 

With all due respect to quarantine baking or gardening, that is a pretty impressive benefit for a lockdown side project. 

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