this post was submitted on 03 Jun 2024
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Platform agnostic = you own the mp3/FLACC/ect file, and can play it through whatever client you want
Platform Locked = you do not own the files, and they are DRM locked to their proprietary media player (see: spotify, kindle, ect)
Of course there are ways around those locks, but it's illegal to remove DRM protections (in the us)
Gotcha.
Thought of it in a more of a Exclusive-To-Platform kind of way.
Yea I figured, no worries
You can switch to another service any time you want though.
You'll own nothing and you'll like it
It's way cheaper though.
Idk if I owned as many cds as I've spent on music subscriptions I'd own more high fidelity music than I'd know what to do with
BS. One new CD is at least 10$. A good band collection is then a year worth of subscription fees. So, do you only listen to a few bands?
Before Spotify I pirated everything. In lossless, ofc. I had 200GB of music, it wouldn't fit on my ipod classic, and I still was limited.
I pirated at least a lifetime worth of Spotify premium and yet when I switched to Spotify I discovered so many more artists like the ones I already liked. If I now tried to buy all the songs I've listened to more than once in the last 5 years, I'd go bankrupt.
Spotify is way cheaper.
(now add ease of discovering new music, listening to whatever your friends want to listen to in a car, collaborative playlists, etc etc)
Hey if you find value in paying a subscription go nuts, I won't throw shade
but i used spotify for almost 15 years. Averaged out to $8 a month that's more than $1400, and how much of that music do you think I own?
You can do what you want with your money but I'm not paying another dime to subscription streamers. For discovery there's still radio and youtube and ad-supported streamers, and I still find new artists at music festivals and local venue concerts all the time.
Spotify is a solution in search of a problem.
There's Bandcamp, also, for discovery.