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Music

Last.fm Turns 20 (theverge.com) 6

Last.fm turned 20 years old over the weekend and users are still tracking their music playback hundreds of thousands of times a day. The Verge's Jacob Kastrenakes writes: Last.fm felt just a little bit revolutionary when it was first introduced in the early 2000s. The site's plug-ins -- which were originally created for a different service called Audioscrobbler -- tapped into your music player, took note of everything you listened to, and then displayed all kinds of statistics about your listening habits. Plus, it could recommend tracks and artists to you based on what other people with similar listening habits were interested in. "If this catches on, a system like this would be a really effective way to discover new artists and find people with similar tastes," the blogger Andy Baio wrote in February 2003 after first trying it out.

This was very much a precursor to the algorithmic recommendation systems that are built into every music streaming service today. Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal -- whatever it is you're listening to, they're all tracking your habits and using that to recommend new tracks to you. But on those services, your data is kept hidden behind the scenes. Using Last.fm was like having access to your year-end Spotify Wrapped but available every single day and always updating.

Streaming services' automated recommendations have largely obviated the need for a platform like Last.fm (I certainly haven't scrobbled anything in more than a decade). But I poked around, and it turns out there are still corners of the internet building vibrant communities around its features. One of the big uses is on Discord, where third-party developers have built a service called .fmbot that integrates scrobbling data into the popular chat room app. Thom, a backend developer based in the Netherlands, says the bot has more than 400,000 total users, with 40,000 people engaging with the service each day. It's particularly popular in Discords based around specific musical artists or genres -- where people "want to compare their statistics to each other" -- and among servers for small friend groups, so they can "dive deeper into what everyone is listening to," he says. The bot pulls in fun stats that people can brag about: the date of when they first listened to a given song, just how many days' worth of music they consumed each year, or a list of their top albums.
In 2008, we ran a story from Slashdot reader Rob Spengler about Last.fm's "mountain of data." Not only did he note how Last.fm was the "largest online radio outlet" at the time, surpassing Pandora and others, but he (hilariously, in hindsight) posed the question: "Does sitting on a mountain of data make Last.FM powerful enough to start making a stand against the record industry?"
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Last.fm Turns 20

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  • by Steve Newall ( 24926 ) on Wednesday November 23, 2022 @12:56AM (#63073084)
    When it fist started, it was also a subscription based streaming service. However. Aroind the time ( just before ) the major streaming services started, they closed this part of their business and refunded me. Now I use Apple Music and Spotify. Last.fm was truly an innovator
  • I know this is a Slashvertisement, but my queston was legit...
    • I do!
      I like last.fm. I quite enjoy tracking my own listening habits and getting recommendations for new music that I might like.
      Unnecessary fun fact: Since 2007 I have scrobbled 372,702 songs.

      • Me too, have been using the service since 2006, one of my players can no longer scrobble, but most of my music stats go there, and from time to time (more time between than I like, I must admit) I go there to find new "old stuff" (my taste is basically old bands/artist, rarely I like recent ones) and I've found great things that most people I know never heard off.

        in my case, my unnecessary fan fact is 145k scrobbles since 2006.

  • by suss ( 158993 ) on Wednesday November 23, 2022 @08:41AM (#63073552)

    Remember when that mountain of data was breached? [slashdot.org] or when it was sent to the RIAA? [slashdot.org]

    Yeah, thanks a lot, last.fm.

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