I used a Norwegian open-source tool to analyze my old Spotify data as a customer.
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@lislegaard @groot TBH, I don't understand how anyone has a problem finding new muaic. I discover new genres and musicians all the time, and I've never used spotify.
people tell me irl
someone plays a tune at a bar or social centre I go to
I browse (and buy from) bandcamp
I follow music sharing accounts and music lovers on fedi
I listen to radio streams from all over the world@firn @lislegaard afaiu the issue is often that new music must be fed to them on demand via an algorithm they can just mash 'next' or 'like' on.
But I appreciate your point, it's like worrying about how one will get to see new cats if they delete facebook.
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@firn @lislegaard afaiu the issue is often that new music must be fed to them on demand via an algorithm they can just mash 'next' or 'like' on.
But I appreciate your point, it's like worrying about how one will get to see new cats if they delete facebook.
@groot @lislegaard Good call on the cats. Thankfully, there's caturday!
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@groot @lislegaard Good call on the cats. Thankfully, there's caturday!
@firn @lislegaard many years ago I had children, so I'm getting unsolicited cat pics for the rest of my days on earth.
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i wrote a blog post about how to find new music btw
https://www.kristofferlislegaard.com/blog/2025-11-05-be-your-own-algorithm-in-search-of-new-music/
@lislegaard @groot Always worth it to follow the connections. I follow a few musicians, and they are always posting about their friends, follow them, etc. Also just watching local small venue calendars is a great way to find folks as well.
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I used a Norwegian open-source tool to analyze my old Spotify data as a customer.
I don't use Spotify anymore, but I can announce that of all the money I ever paid them, approx. 5% went to the artists I listened to.
That is a pretty insane transfer of wealth from the bottom / middle to the top if you ask me.
I already knew Spotify is a big scam for those not at the top, but seeing the numbers still gives me a bodily reaction.

@lislegaard funny how piracy was such a big threat to musicians and how every single thing we (piracy defenders) told people about what was going to happen to the music industry came true.
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@lislegaard funny how piracy was such a big threat to musicians and how every single thing we (piracy defenders) told people about what was going to happen to the music industry came true.
including the line about how those who pirated the most were also the people who bought the most.
i reeeeeaaaallllyyy remember getting convinced that that was OF COURSE not the case. it's only logic, right?! why would someone who pirated music buy music!?
turns out that was indeed the case, because they were music lovers, and not passive consumers.
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I used a Norwegian open-source tool to analyze my old Spotify data as a customer.
I don't use Spotify anymore, but I can announce that of all the money I ever paid them, approx. 5% went to the artists I listened to.
That is a pretty insane transfer of wealth from the bottom / middle to the top if you ask me.
I already knew Spotify is a big scam for those not at the top, but seeing the numbers still gives me a bodily reaction.

@lislegaard i wonder who makes more from spotify: artists, engineers, or cloud & hardware companies?
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@lislegaard i wonder who makes more from spotify: artists, engineers, or cloud & hardware companies?
daniel ek.
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I used a Norwegian open-source tool to analyze my old Spotify data as a customer.
I don't use Spotify anymore, but I can announce that of all the money I ever paid them, approx. 5% went to the artists I listened to.
That is a pretty insane transfer of wealth from the bottom / middle to the top if you ask me.
I already knew Spotify is a big scam for those not at the top, but seeing the numbers still gives me a bodily reaction.
@lislegaard@sonomu.club on podcast2.0 artist get 100%. unless of course they decide to programtically split 90-10 with say, the designer of the cover art. oh, and the cryptofascists from paypal or stripe? well they get jack shit! -
daniel ek.
@lislegaard well yeah of course. if we knew how much of every (currency unit) spent was going to the ceo and other executives, we might make better decisions about value for money
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@lislegaard@sonomu.club on podcast2.0 artist get 100%. unless of course they decide to programtically split 90-10 with say, the designer of the cover art. oh, and the cryptofascists from paypal or stripe? well they get jack shit!
how does this system get around paypal / stripe?
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@lislegaard@sonomu.club on podcast2.0 artist get 100%. unless of course they decide to programtically split 90-10 with say, the designer of the cover art. oh, and the cryptofascists from paypal or stripe? well they get jack shit!@lislegaard@sonomu.club it's also very pirate friendly: those who want to save the music to a local drive can inspect the xml file (it's all just RSS). but then again all of the (open source) apps have a button for that.
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how does this system get around paypal / stripe?
@lislegaard@sonomu.club Bitcoin. If you know a more ecofriendly, fairer and sovereign way to transfer value, please share! -
@lislegaard@sonomu.club Bitcoin. If you know a more ecofriendly, fairer and sovereign way to transfer value, please share!
ah! the thing that people bought multiple GPUs for before ai you mean?
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ah! the thing that people bought multiple GPUs for before ai you mean?
@lislegaard@sonomu.club do you know of a more ecofriendly, fairer and sovereign way to transfer value? How is NOK issued? Petrol? -
@lislegaard@sonomu.club do you know of a more ecofriendly, fairer and sovereign way to transfer value? How is NOK issued? Petrol?
pumping up oil and investing in war i think.
sorry not intending to be too trollface here. probably the right place for me to call off this track

i don't actually know enough about crypto to bitch too much about it.
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pumping up oil and investing in war i think.
sorry not intending to be too trollface here. probably the right place for me to call off this track

i don't actually know enough about crypto to bitch too much about it.
@lislegaard@sonomu.club fuck crypto and screw money. until we figure out the social bits, Bitcoin (a peer2peer electronic currency backed by the laws of physics) remains the most ecofriendly, fairest and most sovereign way to trabsfer value. -
@lislegaard@sonomu.club it's also very pirate friendly: those who want to save the music to a local drive can inspect the xml file (it's all just RSS). but then again all of the (open source) apps have a button for that.@lislegaard@sonomu.club being able to save the music locally and share it with friends without caveats is probably the most interesting part of this branch of your thread. And no one is obliged to monetize: it's essentially gift-economy. the shocker is that a remarkable portion of people actually want to support art

thanks for balling!
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@lislegaard@sonomu.club being able to save the music locally and share it with friends without caveats is probably the most interesting part of this branch of your thread. And no one is obliged to monetize: it's essentially gift-economy. the shocker is that a remarkable portion of people actually want to support art

thanks for balling!
@lislegaard@sonomu.club Here's a tool to publish your own feed from the comfort of your domain name with the tools you already have.
https://new.musicsideproject.com/
Look into it sometime and never hesitate to reach out if you want guidance! Sovereign Art is issued by sovereign Artist!
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I used a Norwegian open-source tool to analyze my old Spotify data as a customer.
I don't use Spotify anymore, but I can announce that of all the money I ever paid them, approx. 5% went to the artists I listened to.
That is a pretty insane transfer of wealth from the bottom / middle to the top if you ask me.
I already knew Spotify is a big scam for those not at the top, but seeing the numbers still gives me a bodily reaction.
@lislegaard 5% is more than I expected imo (still not much). I was expecting something around 0.something%