
"Spotify has removed restrictions that prevented free users from listening to specific tracks. With Lossless audio now finally rolling out to paying subscribers, the music streaming service has announced that it's also allowing non-paying listeners to search, play, and share any song they want, without having to upgrade to a Premium subscription. The update is being rolled out globally and addresses one of the most annoying limitations of Spotify's shuffle-only free experience."
"Instead of playing the specific song a free user had searched for or selected in an album or playlist, Spotify would previously launch tracks in a randomized order that forced users to skip songs until they reached the one they actually wanted to play, with skips limited to six per hour. Now, non-paying users can "pick and play any song you want," according to Spotify."
"There are still some restrictions in place, however, with reporting that free users can only listen to one song before the app starts shuffling, and an undisclosed limit on how many on-demand minutes a user has per day, according to Music Business Worldwide. The free experience will also still include ads, but this update gives free listeners fewer reasons to use rival streaming services like YouTube when they want to play a specific song without dancing around shuffle-skipping requirements."
Spotify removed restrictions that prevented free users from selecting and playing specific tracks on demand. The change allows non-paying listeners to search for, play, and share any song globally without upgrading to Premium. Free users still encounter ads and remaining limits: the app reportedly lets a user listen to one song before reverting to shuffle and enforces an undisclosed daily on-demand minutes cap. The update ends the previous randomized playback that required skipping tracks with a six-skip-per-hour limit. The change reduces incentives to use rival services for single-track playback and facilitates immediate playback of shared music links.
Read at The Verge
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