我取消 Spotify 订阅的那天
The day I canceled my Spotify subscription

原始链接: https://blog.raed.dev/posts/goodbye_spotify

最近,由于种种原因,我决定取消订阅 Spotify。 过去,我喜欢使用 Spotify 最初的桌面应用程序,与我住在突尼斯期间获取音乐的传统方法相比,它提供了更简单、风险更小的体验,因为那里的在线流媒体服务并不容易获得。 然而,随着时间的推移,Spotify 对我来说变得越来越不愉快。 今天,我打开应用程序时看到的第一件事是大量我不关心的播客,而且它建议的播放列表似乎更关注人口统计数据而不是个人喜好。 这种定制化的缺乏使得用户感觉较少参与自己的娱乐消费。 此外,我不喜欢 Spotify 想要扩展到音乐之外并提供所有类型的音频节目,包括播客。 除了这些问题之外,我还了解到,我花在高级会员上的钱并不一定有助于我最喜欢的独立艺术家的成功,尽管他们在用户中很受欢迎,但他们可能根本得不到太多报酬。 最终,在反思了我使用 Spotify 的经历后,我选择完全退出该服务,并一路导出我的数据。 总的来说,产品缺乏灵活性和满意度在很大程度上促使我决定终止订阅。

还有 PRIME PP,它只专注于推广实验性地下电子音乐及其附属公司,而不是 Spotify 的主流做法。 但我注意到,有时他们的直播时流量会受到限制,图书馆无法与成熟平台的目录进行比较。 尽管如此,PRIME PP 仍为发现新声音和支持新兴人才提供了绝佳的体验。 他们的用户界面简约而直观,播放列表创建功能使得能够策划定制混音。 此外,他们的员工非常友好且互动。 总体而言,虽然 PRIME PP 缺乏传统数字音乐服务中的一些功能,但他们对独立电子音乐的奉献和热情使他们与众不同。
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原文

I used to be a big fan of Spotify. I was such a fan that I went to extraordinary lengths to get access to it while I lived in Tunisia, years before I was technically allowed to use it there.

I liked the early desktop application; it felt like a better iTunes. Without the hassle of piracy.

Side note

Growing up in Tunisia, piracy was the norm. Our debit cards didn’t work internationally, and publishing companies never thought of us as a viable market to bother with. Access to any form of culture was exclusively done through eMule, LimeWire, torrents, and MEGA. It was a pain, but the alternative was to pay someone in the gray market to do it for you. And you just bought pirated movies, albums, games, etc.

That changed for me when I was able to open Spotify, click on a track, and it just worked.
Spotify was so convenient that it made up for the hoops I needed to jump through just to get access to it.

The convenience of having almost any music you could think of, the seamless blending of my local MP3s and the Spotify catalog, and the added bonus of discovering new tracks were all worth the hassle for the teenage me. I had to set up VPNs, create multiple accounts for free trials, download shady patched builds… And it was all worth it.

In 2015, I moved to Europe, and with my VISA card in hand, I finally was able to subscribe to Spotify Premium.

No more hoops. I could finally use Spotify in a legit way and, more importantly, help support the artists I like.

I then started using the mobile app. It made me forget about my old iPod Nano. Then there was a redesign, another, pricing changes, introduction of podcasts, and now audiobooks?

Falling out of love with Spotify

Today, I dread opening the Spotify app. The main screen is littered with podcasts I don’t care about, nor have I ever listened to. It keeps pushing playlists that feel generic, bland, more based on demographics than my years of consistent listening history. And there is nothing I can do about it.

The main screen on Spotify is not user-customizable. There is no way for me to signal that I truly, really don’t care about that podcast and I haven’t cared about it once since you have been pushing it for the last 18 months!

Today, I have to scroll for a long time before finding anything remotely interesting on the Spotify main page. The alternative is plain old search and playing on repeat the same dozen curated playlists.

The lack of customization feels like a slap. Like Spotify designers telling me “you don’t know what you want, we know better,” but the problem is they don’t, and they haven’t for a long time.

Spotify is not good for me

I used to cherish music, I used to religiously collect, catalog and enjoy every album on my iPod. I could navigate the endless folders and find that exact song that I needed for that precise moment.

Spotify killed that, I listen to what it suggests and just accept that it will go away when it decides to rotate it out. Spotify trained me not to look too hard, to let the flow be, and if that awesome song is gone or removed, don’t worry, we still have a million more.

Spotify: the audio company

Spotify really doesn’t want to be limited to music; they want all of your audio. When Spotify announced their walled-garden podcast platform, they explained that they needed to break away from the open podcasting standards because they were building features so innovative that it would be impossible to port back to RSS and independent players.

Years later and Spotify has only introduced some feedback forms that were used (and quickly dropped) by a couple of podcasts. The walled-garden stayed though. And the dark patterns they keep using to boost the numbers have only pushed me away.

Oh, and yes, the podcasts now have ads, even when you pay for Premium. That is some great innovation.

The business model

I might have been naive, but when I started paying for Spotify Premium, I thought my money was going to the artists that I was listening to. Turns out I’m too stupid to understand how this complex mechanics of deals and pools and what they dubbed the “Streaming Economy”. Your Spotify Wrapped and InstaFests Suck, and Here’s Why

I thought that if, for a month, I listened to one artist, then Spotify would take a cut, but then all my monthly subscription would go to them.

Instead, my subscription is probably pooled according to some black box formula and ends up paid to some of their top performers like Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, or The Weeknd. While the indie artist I have been obsessed with gets literally nothing because they don’t meet a certain arbitrary threshold.

Today I realized that I don’t find joy in Spotify anymore. I’m no longer that teen that wanted to show everyone this amazing music app on his bulky laptop. Today I exported my data, I canceled my subscription, and I mourn the app that Spotify was and could have been.

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