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by troupo
921 days ago
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> If you're not a logged in user, it only plays a preview of the tune, which of course does not count towards plays for artists. Have you considered that's because of music licensing? Playing music costs Spotify money Disclaimer: I work at Spotify, but this is true for anything streaming. If you stream anything beyond the preview, you have to pay the rights holder. Worse still, even previews often cost money (IIRC this is true in audiobooks). So Spotify really has no choice but only play previews for the non-logged-in users. And that's before we start with the usual problems of gaming the system, bots etc. if you count plays by non-logged in users towards artist plays. |
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YouTube, soundcloud, audiomack, pretty much every other audio platform allows embedded players and playlists that allow non-logged-in users to preview full songs. Spotify used to, but quietly changed over time in the past 2 years. As a rights holder, I get paid more from TikTok and youtube for even clips of my songs being played. I have to disagree with the ideal that Spotify doesn't limit artists in this way... Somehow major artists can also on twitter and other sites share full preview songs from Spotify to even non-logged-in users via links, highlighting a deep contradiction in the policies you cite.
If you go to any artist page and navigate to the embed menu item, the embed playlist function on profiles shows/plays full songs as an example for the embed code, which is also quite misleading to artists that want to share their own Spotify music list. When using a single track link on social media sites, on mobile most times clicks don't even play the correct artist song, and on desktop, as soon as an independent artist's song is played, the next song is one by another artist, instead of logical behavior of playing another track by the original (linked) artist... These behaviors are different than many other sites, and there really aren't logical reasons behind that behavior other than to steer listeners towards popular artists and advertising artists as my best guess.
Embedding spotify music player only serves to steer listeners away from the artist sites the music players are embedded on, as they work within an iframe, even when I'm logged in, the embedded player plays only clips of full tunes, so I'm compelled to see it as a shortcut to only promoting what Spotify wants people to hear, rather than all music by unsuspecting artists that embed the player that assume it behaves normally and usefully as a music promotion tool.