I still think it's shady/shitty, but the scope does seem to be limited for now.
It does not say this will affect Discovery Weekly or Release Radar, although it's a slippery slope to those for sure.
Basically all I do on Spotify is to browse through song / artists radios to discover new music.
TFA isn't really news to you if that matches your usage pattern. It's immediately obvious how Spotify will REPEATEDLY suggest the same song. But I am glad to have my impression validated
And no, this isn't because "humans are bad at randomness and you don't actually want a random playlist of related artists"
I'm also a big fan of "<Artist> Radio" or of just making a playlist with 3-4 songs in it and then letting Spotify take over afterwards...
If I start seeing the same junk pushed into those playlists over and over, I will definitely reconsider my membership.
I’m confused.
Any advantage afforded to a given artist by engaging in this service will vanish once everyone does -- the end result is Spotify paying artists less while the artists get nothing in return.
They should call it GroupiesDeLux
That means it will push the extreme Gini coefficient of music revenue even higher. The best-sellers will be able to pay and further reduce the opportunity for smaller artists to build an audience.
I do not see this as a good thing.
I could be not-completely-against-it if they:
Make this program available only for artists that have less than X Monthly Listeners, Give users the option to disable "boosted tracks" and set a reasonable ratio of organic/boosted songs (less than 5%, for example).
Some music distributors like The Orchard are doing something "similar" from their workstations: you can use the money you've generated from organic streams (and I think you can actually "borrow" the money they expect you to generate during the next quarter) to create paid campaigns on Facebook, Twitter and other social media.
My, how times have changed now that it is done right out in the open.
I guess we have come full circle.-
Paying somebody to put a song before the public.-