Spotify Bans Ad Blockers In Updated ToS (theverge.com) 172
In an updated Terms of Service policy sent out on Thursday, Spotify is now explicitly banning ad blockers. "The new rules specifically state that 'circumventing or blocking advertisements in the Spotify Service, or creating or distributing tools designed to block advertisements in the Spotify Service' can result in immediate termination or suspension of your account," reports The Verge. From the report: The service already takes significant measures to limit ad blockers. In a DigiDay report from last August, a Spotify spokesperson revealed that the company has "multiple detection measures in place monitoring consumption on the service to detect, investigate and deal with [artificial manipulation of streaming activity]." After it was reported last March that 2 million users (about 2 percent of free Spotify users) were dodging ads with modded apps and accounts, Spotify began cracking down by disabling accounts when the company detected abnormal activity. Users were sent email warnings and given the chance to reactivate their accounts after uninstalling the ad-blocking software. In some rare cases where the problem persisted, Spotify would terminate the account. The new Terms of Service, which go into effect on March 1st, will give Spotify the authority to terminate accounts immediately, without warning.
Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:5, Insightful)
And is the last gasp of a company that is destined to die. People will not put up with ads in the locations and quantity that publishers and marketers want. Nor should they have to.
Re:Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:5, Insightful)
And is the last gasp of a company that is destined to die. People will not put up with ads in the locations and quantity that publishers and marketers want. Nor should they have to.
Bingo.
First they load the site with enough ads to annoy me, then they take steps to make sure they can continue to annoy me. This is not exactly a recipe for success.
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Recent article mentioned that Spotify and such "saved" the recording labels. Thus reviving and feeding the RIAA monster in the basement. Maybe that time is up. Let nature take its course as people vote with their mouse-clicks / wallets. A few "starving artists" for a few years might also reset the music "industry" to produce something worth listening to.
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And is the last gasp of a company that is destined to die.
Most users have premium and fund the company way more than free accounts.
Re: Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:1)
If that were true--that only a tiny fraction of revenue comes from ads to free users--then why would they even care?
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Adblockers can be annoying for Spotify and its ilk and therefore they don't like them. When a company stoops so low to ban them, it just means their business model failed or they're doomed for another reason.
It's like a shop with a rule to shoot shoplifters on sight.
A total over-reaction which in the end won't help Spotify except help them to annoy customers and drive them away.
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Re: Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want money from your users, put the product behind a paywall. It is that simple.
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Re: Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't prefer ads, that's why they block them.
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... and why should Spotify care is some sponging freeloader leaves, and stops wasting their bandwidth?
Re: Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:2, Insightful)
Because those freeloaders, in large amounts, are useful to inflate their numbers and make investors believe they are a successful business.
Re: Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:5, Interesting)
However ads are dangerous and lead to other issues. Once there are ads the company will now want to have targeted ads to maximize income, or just add more and more ads to maximize income, outsourcing the ads to a third party that they can't control, etc. On computers these ad services are main vector for malware.
An online music service should theoretically be better for the consumer than the radio in the automobile. There we are allowed to changed the station instantly when an ad comes on and we're not being tracked by what stations we prefer.
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Let me start a patent application.
Don't forget to mention the prior art in credit cards that allow you to generate virtual numbers that can only be used by a single vendor. E.g., cards from Citi, Chase and others.
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Not entirely true. As it stands I don't want my CC# plastered all over 100,000 different website databases because we seem to have 20 breaches/second. If only there was a way to generate a pass...some kind of token...something that says "I have a business relationship with this business" that wasn't just a publicly accessible open-buffet single number.
Like...a one-time number? A number that can only be used by one business. A single-person key of sorts. Better if we can vet the use of it and revoke it if it's being misused.
I think I'm on to something here. Let me start a patent application.
Way too late. Check with your bank/credit card service to see if they provide this service. Lots of them will generate a valid transaction code for one time use.
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I don't buy it. I think plenty of people would happy pay for ad-free Spotify with 10 songs to the penny.
They are way greedier than that.
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It is not a bad deal at all. Comes to less that 3 a month per person. Not only are there no ads, but the syncing between devices is great. I have a few playlists that I add some tracks to while at home or at work, and those playlists default to downloading on my portable devices, so that I won't have to stream every time I am in the car.
I'm
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As one user i find 10 euro a month way too much. If i were listening to it for hours a day, maybe. Netflix already costs me over 10 euro a month, and it's at a constant struggle for monthly renewal. Spotify is just too expensive. 10 euro or dollar sounds like a bargain, but it's not.
I went back to the traditional way. I use cd's -thrift stores sell them for $1 each-, i use youtube when i want to check out something new, or have a playlist and don't care for audio quality. And spotify can *** because their f
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I lost my Spotify account a few years ago, which was premium through a special deal through my phone company (Vodafone UK). I received an email that my email address had been changed, but no chance to confirm and accept the change. The hacker changed other details on the account preventing me from confirming any details, and apparently Spotify's security team had no access to historical account information. It was a work phone and I was travelling a lot, so I couldn't get the billing information they ask
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I don't buy it. I think plenty of people would happy pay for ad-free Spotify with 10 songs to the penny.
They are way greedier than that.
Lots of people pay $10/month to use Spotify ad free. Not sure how the "per song" math works out, but their catalog is vast.
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but people don't want to pay at all, instead they prefer ads.
To be clear, this is a false dichotomy. People do not want ads. People have never wanted ads. What they want is free and also NO ADVERTS. I know that's not possible, so I pay for Spotify to not get ads.
What I'm concerned about is, I also paid for Adguard, the paid version blocks adverts for all apps on desktop and mobile.
What I don't want is for Spotify to consider me one of the people that are ripping them off because "OMG AD BLOCKER DETECTED"
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I have this exact concern for the exact same reasons!
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Apparently 46% of users do pay for Spotify.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/m... [forbes.com]
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For those without enough time to read the article and do the math: 207 million users vs. 96 million premium users.
96 / 207 = 46.37% +/- 0.50%
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If you do not want ads, then do not visit ad supported sites. It is that easy.
How? Given that they fight to put their links a the top of every search engine? Given that they edit every Wikipedia page to add their link, given that they spam everywhere with everything? There's no way to know you are visiting an ad supported page until you get there. Attempting to run your code on someone else's computer is a crime under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Advertisers who try to ban ad blockers should be locked away for a minimum of 20 years.
If you want to run an ad supported service
Re:Banning ad blockers will never work (Score:4, Informative)
I use the open source dns server "Pihole" : https://pi-hole.net/ [pi-hole.net]
Blocks all ads at the dns level for all devices on my network. For others I use Firefox with ublock and noscript extension to block spammy and malware scripts, and I use the extension Decentraleyes which protects privacy by evading large delivery networks that claim to offer free services, and added protection against trackers and browser fingerprinting.
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I havea pfsense server with an ad blocker. Protects my systems including my mobile devices. Plus noscript for my desktop and laptops.
[John]
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This is exactly what will happen. It is that inevitable.
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Re:Users ban Spotify (Score:5, Insightful)
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And when 80% of their users leave, who will pay them to advertise anyway?
There has to be a better way. I know some people are way into their music and all, but for me, ads are not acceptable, and I'll just do without. I've got enough (purchased over the last 45 years) music on my drive to last me forever anyway.
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If you were to (gasp!) RTFA, you'd see that they claim that only 2% of the free-service users are smart enough to employ ad blockers. So to your corrected question, "And when 2% of their users leave", I don't think they'll be too crushed at the loss.
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Guess who won't be using Spotify? (Score:5, Insightful)
Q: Guess who won't be using Spotify?
A: Everybody.
Sorry, but if you prevent me from using an ad blocker you're basically preventing me from visiting your site. That's just how it works, nothing personal.
So long, Spotify, and don't let the door hit you on the way out.
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I don't see any ads. Oh wait, it's because I actually pay for the service. You want free music streaming and avoid the ads as well? Sorry, but it's probably you who should be careful about the swinging door.
Re:Guess who won't be using Spotify? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're using their free service but blocking ads you are actually costing them money because they have to pay for the songs they stream.
So it is probably best you not use the service. Spotify isn't a charity.
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Spotify isn't a charity.
Neither am I.
Here's the thing- if ads weren't so well-known as malware vectors I might allow them, but they're a clear and present danger to my computer.
So, no.
(And to be clear, I don't use Spotify, I've never used Spotify, and I sure as hell won't be using them now. This is all academic to me.)
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Username checks out beautifully.
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I was already not using it.
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I was already not using it.
Same here, but I couldn't resist kicking them while they're down.
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For somebody actually listening to a lot of different music, that is actually pretty cheap...
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Yet...they may NEVER die. ....sites like FuckJerry (something that I don't believe I've ever even HEARD of) are making $75000 off a single instagram post copying other people's shit and adding ads.
I have to admit, I don't really understand how the internet economy works, where youtubers pull in $millions$ for nearly nothing...where is all this money coming from?
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Q: Guess who won't be using Spotify?
A: Everybody.
Sorry, but if you prevent me from using an ad blocker you're basically preventing me from visiting your site. That's just how it works, nothing personal.
So long, Spotify, and don't let the door hit you on the way out.
I'm sure they will be devastated at the loss of your $0/mo (since you were not in their paid customers) and the loss of your, er, not viewing their ads.
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I'm sure they will be devastated at the loss of your $0/mo
They were already devastated since I never used them.
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The major reason is that if you want to advertisers to pay per ad viewed by the audience, then the advertiser (or rather, the ad network) generally wants to measure the number of views themselves to ensure that you aren't inflating the number.
There are a number of people who instead monetize their site with ads as part of their content. These people generally get paid per click, rather than per view, often through an "affiliate" style arrangement.
However, that requires the site owner to manage their adverti
Paying for a subscription is much better option (Score:5, Insightful)
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I agree with you, but unfortunately 99% of people choose ad supported service and then try to block ads instead of paying.
Which shows you how much they actually value the service if they aren't willing to pay to get an ad free stream.
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I agree with you, but unfortunately 99% of people choose ad supported service and then try to block ads instead of paying.
2% of users block ads according to the summary so you're about 97% wrong.
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What would an average web site need to set that price at?
A gift card per site per year would cost how much?
A gift card per year that pools money into a browser fund that pays the site per visit?
Something new that avoids the CC costs, a traditional payment system taking a huge %.
To the www soon? (Score:3)
Content is not shown.
Return to the site with a new ip and no blocker, the site loads.
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What do the ad blockers do during ads? (Score:2)
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Spotify is an audio service.
Customer respect (Score:4, Interesting)
A long time ago, a founder of a very large software company (still in business BTW but not with him) told me
he was against copy protection (and banned the use of it in the company) because you owe everything to your
customers that pay and should disregard people that don't pay you anything.
I thought that was an enlightened approach, and still do.
That company is now neck deep in the software-as-a-rental model and the long paying customers feel screwed.
I think they auto find another cad package...
Wonder how it will deal with network level blocks (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm on a network where the admins have blocked many/most ad servers for security reasons (ad companies have historically been tricked into serving malware with the ads).
I wonder how Spotify will deal with that. This is not a block on the app, or the device, or even the computer, but rather at the network level. If their ads are served by the same servers as their content then it should be fine, but if their ads are served by separate servers that are already on a blocked list then it could be an issue. And not one the user can control unless they switch to a different network, if available, or disable wifi and use mobile data. If they shut down my account for this then so be it, because I won't use my mobile data just for them when wifi is available.
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I guess that will be caught in the ad block test.
Your options are to stop using the service (a win for Spotify because they no longer need to pay for a user they get no advertising revenue for) or pay for the service (also a win for Spotify).
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Barney the Purple Dino Sings.... (Score:4, Funny)
I ban you,
we just roll around in poo,
singing "Pay for it or don't block ads,
as we are a bunch of cads..."
It's our right,
even if it's wrong,
So get it on and bang a gong,
If you wanna listen to your favorite song,
You are forced to suck upon the corporate dong,
I have a 100 GB Music Collection for a reason (Score:1)
Not a Spotify customer and never will be, then (Score:3)
Re: Not a Spotify customer and never will be, then (Score:2)
âoeAnd nothing of value was lost.â
Are you referring to your traffic on their site? Then yes. I agree.
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I'm really not seeing a problem here from Spotify's point of view.
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You are not a potential customer. You are a potential freeloader. Why do they want a potential freeloader?
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Then I don't need Spotify. (Score:4, Interesting)
Sorry, but ads are, unfortunately, a transmission vector for malware and compromise code.
I do not choose to open my systems to that.
And, even if I did, it's MY desktop real-estate, not the ad purveyor's.
If they wish to lock me out of their service? C'est la vie.
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Ads are what supports their free version. Stop being a cheapskate and pay for premium if you don't like them.
In some cases I do!
But I will NOT be nickeled and dimed to death by every last website on the planet.
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I won't.
Because I won't even come in...
So I must allow ads to go... where exactly? (Score:2)
Ok, so I'm not allowed to set my browser to not download ads.
I guess I'm also not allowed to prevent ads from being displayed on screen?
Am I allowed not to look? Or must it also reach my eyes?
Am I allowed not to pay attention? Or must I let it into my brain? My mind? My soul? My very existence?
Why not just force me to buy the damn thing you're promoting and get this over with?
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Of course you are. You are also allowed to choose which data you do and don't upload. Spotify are taking advantage of this right.
Of course you are. If a company wants to stop doing business with you as a result then they're entitled to do so.
You can choose to do what you want here. I think your argument has sort of
'twas nice while it lasted. (Score:2)
NEXT!
(and yes, I am yelling. That's the point)
Pay for things twice! (Score:2)
next (Score:2)
get rid of the 'free' service (Score:2)
netflix doesn't have one, and they seem to be doing more then OK.
why couldn't spotify only have subscription based model?
Don't block ads! Click on them all! (Score:2)
https://adnauseam.io/ [adnauseam.io] clicks on all the ads for you. This add-on was blocked by Google, because they are more afraid of this than ad blockers. It must be great.
But still flush your cookies when you close your browser.
AI-Assisted Ad-Blockers Ban Spotify (Score:2)
Me: Genious, I heard of something called Spotify, find me some new music on Spotify
Genius: There is no such thing as add free music on Spotify. Spotify is no longer relevant.
Me: Ok, Genious, find me some new music.
Genius: Ok, here are some new tracks in a genre that you like.
Or ... (Score:2)
Or you could just, you know, pay for the service.
It's $10/mo. For dang near all the music catalog anybody could want. You can't buy one CD for that.
Never paying for music again (Score:1)
Cool. Another reason not to use it (Score:2)
In related news: Ad blockers ban Spotify (Score:2)
(some text to keep the filter happy, but really, the content is the subject)