Spotify's New Family Plan Is Cheaper, $14.99 For Up To 6 people (techcrunch.com) 67
An anonymous reader writes: Spotify on Monday announced some changes to its family plan subscriptions, allowing them to use Spotify Premium for $14.99 per month and get six different Spotify accounts and profiles. This is the exact same deal as the one you can get on Apple Music today. Spotify is just making sure you're not going to move your entire family over to Apple Music for pricing reasons. The company introduced family plans back in 2014. At the time, it was one of the first subscription services with family plans. You could get 50 percent off extra Spotify accounts. So it would cost you $14.99 for two accounts, $19.99 for three accounts, $19.99 for four accounts, etc. For big families with at least three accounts, the new Spotify family plan is cheaper. For singles and couples, it's the same price.
Re:What is Spotify? Help a brother out (Score:5, Informative)
You pay a monthly fee for technically not pirating music (while the artists only get fractions of a cent), as long as you're paying and the country you're in is blessed by licensing agreements.
If you don't pay, you can't cache music for offline use and it inserts ads (but still can listen to it).
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Since all the artists only get fractions of a cent, why not send them a few Dogecoins instead?
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If it ain't free it ain't worth a damn. (Score:1, Troll)
Crazy how others want to profit from other people's thoughts, isn't it?
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the main account (the one paying) has some control over the others, so, it can be done, but you depend on trust, that's why it is called "family plan".
I'm sorry... (Score:3, Informative)
Is this actually news, or is it just a fucking ad?
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Just a #$& ad.
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I think you meant: Welcome to Slashdot
You're complaining about this? Seriously? If you have alternatives to this, by all means, employ them; it's great that you choose to do so (something we all fully support), but the vast majority of people like having easy options to use, even if they're subscription based.
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Kids: youtube, youtube-dl, and sharing mp3s at will during school or while hanging out. otherwise pandora, or some freemium service that caters to obscure genres like glitch-core or butter-pickle-hop or whatever squeeling fan belt noises kids listen to these days.
No kidding. My daughter was recently telling me about the websites she listens to right now... it's mostly background music from games like Harvest Moon and Minecraft.
Good luck keeping up with "the kids", Spotify, Apple, Pandora et. al.
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The Minecraft soundtrack is on Spotify, FWIW
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They release game soundtracks. Have for years and almost all the services have them.
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You owe me a coffee. And a new keyboard.
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As a fellow dad, this just saved me $10/month. I like being not tied to one platform only, or having a platform be so obviously be second fiddle -- "Apple Music runs on Android". We also avoid the hot abortion that is iTunes.
Wife: has Android phone, a Kindle, a laptop for work and we have a shared desktop. Spotify has all her playlists on all those platforms.
Me: I listen using the Spotify web interface at work, sync albums to the phone for driving so I don't burn through data plan. Whenever the corporate Li
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Glitch-core. I like that. Lemme fire up FL
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Yes, you need to fuck if you plan on having a family. That is all.
Worth noting... (Score:2)
Family plans usually have a "one household" restriction in their terms and conditions, but here Spotify didn't put any requirements on where or who the...
primary account holder and up to five (5) subsidiary accounts (“sub-accounts”)
...need to be.
The conspiracy theorist in me says it was intentional, since Spotify and Apple Music know they could make way more money if they cut their subscription rates—and have repeatedly tried to do so—but the labels are adamant about a $10/mo minimum. This could be a clever end-run around their contractual obligations.
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Labels are insane to ask for $10/mo for streaming music. I pay less than that to watch unlimited movies and TV shows with Netflix.
I'd pay at most $5/mo for music, but there's so many free streaming options out there that it's not even worth looking for paid alternatives, no matter how good they are.
People pay for music streaming?? (Score:1)
Why?!?
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Because spending (now) $3.75 a month means I can easily find the music I like and listen to it everywhere as well as syncing it to my phone.
Compared to the $20 I used to spend on a CD that had two good songs, it's a bargain. Even at the old price it was a bargain. I've listened to more new artists than ever since I got Spotify as there are effectively zero barriers to entry for me to find new music and up and coming artists. This has also translated into much more regular concert attendance, as up and comin
Re: People pay for music streaming?? (Score:2)
Because it's worth $10 a month for the convenience of not scouring the Internet for free music.
And as an added bonus... (Score:2)
And as an added bonus, Spotify won't delete all your existing music during setup.
Thanks for letting us know (Score:5, Funny)
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In other important News for Nerds, CostCo has a great deal on dairy products
I shop at Sam's you insensitive clod!
'Cutting the cord', LOL (Score:1)
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then there's option b, something like spotify (ad supported, or premium -- doesn't matter.) + audacity, and just record whatever songs you like.
boom! variety + economical.
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hmm... interesting thought. Although I've never heard Music Streaming services be referred to as Cord Cutting folks (just Cable TV) - you do bring up an interesting paradigm. If one cut the cord - wouldn't they be switching to plain old AM/FM radio? First time I ran into this was listening to my local radio station --- streamed over the internet. It made me think of building an in-home Wifi device with AM/FM radio on it.
But I have cut the cord - I now stream HDTV in my house over Wifi to my devices and
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My father listens to Canadian radio because the ads are in French. He finds that not being able to understand them makes the content more enjoyable - more background noise. :-)
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I've been a Pandora user for years. I have a dozen custom radio stations. jbolden radio, filled with songs jbolden likes and the entire spectrum is organized around jbolden's various interests. I can't get anything remotely that good with broadcast.
I'm thinking of switching to Spotify because Pandora isn't keeping up. As for the data plan the services run about 1m / minute. Data in bulk is running about $3-5/gig.
All you Apple Music haters... (Score:2)
You gotta say, this is one of the good results of competition. Apple started with the $15/mo family plan, then Google added, now Spotify must compete.
Of course, with pricing exactly the same one would wonder if it's the music industry who's actually setting the price...
Slacker (Score:2)
You already pay for music... (Score:2)
Seriously, I can't see how people would stomach paying more than $20-40 a year for unlimited, well curated music and music suggestions. The current Spotify and Pandora pay models are just stupid overpriced.
Secondly, I already pay for most of the music. You know the products which the do the radio ads which pay for the mus
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Seriously, I can't see how people would stomach paying more than $20-40 a year for unlimited, well curated music and music suggestions. The current Spotify and Pandora pay models are just stupid overpriced.
I pay it and it works for me. It makes it very easy to listen to whatever I want to without having to commit to buying the albums. If I had bought all of the albums that I have found on Spotify, I'd have spent more than the subscription fee. Plus, I've discovered whole music genres that I previously ignored. It's been great. I think of Spotify as the music version of Netflix.
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And it would be all kinds of great and awesome, if they could actually be bothered to pay the artists more than an insulting pittance.
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Yeah, it is.
That's why I prefer to buy music through Bandcamp or similar deals, where more of the money goes directly to the artist.
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I doubt very much the artist is getting $8-14 on a $10-15 CD. Between the wholesaler and the seller the record company isn't getting nearly that much.
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Then in that case they are making money as the point of sale, distributor, some of the print shop money (organizing), often the artist, recording company.... The fact that they are also the artist is incidental. They are just cutting out most of the other players and doing the work themselves.
Its not really apples to apples, those other parts still exist.
family plan unfair ? (Score:2)
Is it safe to assume that like restaurants, amusement parks and many other marketers, this family plan discriminates against single people? Singles typically pay ~60% of what a family of five would pay.
Here's the math: Price for a family of five for a popular movie ~$22+ popcorn. Single person for a popular movie ~$14. Overhead cost to theater owner for five seats (popular movie) ~$5; cost for 1 seat ~$1. Profit to theater owner for family ~$17; profit for single person ~$13; profit for 5 single persons ~$
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Families consume less resources per person than singles. For example when I used to take my child to Disney regularly I'd spend 2 hrs sitting on a bench giving her a nap. You think I ever did something like that when I took a date or a friend to an amusement park as a single?