Is there a Spotify alternative that has no ads?

I pay for Spotify for 7 years or so now and i’m so sick of all the ads. After every update there seems to be an: oops, sorry, you have ads now. Podcasts are filled with ads. I was just listening to a podcast where they shoved in 3 ads mid-sentence. How long until musicians put ads in their songs. I’m just so sick of it.

  • @kn33
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    21 year ago

    Spotify is giving them that choice. It should say that it won’t run ads for premium users - only free ones.

    • @ickplant
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      121 year ago

      It’s not Spotify that’s “giving them that choice.” It’s the podcast distributor. For example, I use Red Circle, and I can choose to insert ads through them. Podcasts have the same ads regardless of the platform they are on. It’s not Spotify, it’s the podcasts. I don’t like ads either…

      • @kn33
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        21 year ago

        How does it give me location specific ads if Spotify isn’t inserting the ad for them?

        • @misophist
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          1 year ago

          both things are true. The decision to include an ad is made by the podcast producer, but the dynamic ad is facilitated through Spotify’s dynamic ad platform. Podcast producers have been including paid sponsorships in podcasts in addition to inserting ads in their podcasts. For the inserted ads, they will work with the podcast platforms to insert dynamic ads if the platform supports it (like spotify) or generic baked-in ads if the platform doesn’t support it. Either way, inclusion of these ads is controlled by the producer, not the platform, so paying to remove platform-controlled ads won’t remove these ads. If you want your podcast with no ads at all, you may need to see if the producer offers an ad-free version (possibly through a proprietary paid platform like patreon).

        • @ilinamorato
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          111 months ago

          Sorry I’m responding to such an old question, but it seemed like there wasn’t an answer.

          So when you make an http request (which you do every time you download a podcast episode), the request includes your IP address as part of the headers; it’s called “remote address,” and it’s a part of every http request that’s made on the internet. In fact, it has to be, as this is how responses are directed back to your device.

          Now, this isn’t perfect, but there are code libraries that can take that IP and fetch your location from a GeoIP database. It won’t get your pin-drop location unless you’re connected to Wi-Fi at a place with a known IP, but it can pretty generally figure out what cell tower or broadband ISP you’re connected to; that’ll usually get within 50 miles or so. Easy enough to get your state if you’re in the US, and probably even your city.

          So when you request an episode from a podcast using dynamic ad insertion, the server does that lookup, figures out where you’re from, and then chooses ads to insert: local ones if there are any, general ones if not. Then it loads up the local ads into the audio file, hopefully into preselected gaps in the audio. (And honestly, most servers actually pre-cache a bunch of these for big cities where there are a lot of subscribers.) Then they send the podcast, with ads inserted, to your phone.

          Sometimes this gets weird; if you download a podcast while on vacation, for instance, or over a VPN (I’m almost always connected to a VPN, so I rarely get any local ads), or if you subscribe through a service that precaches your podcasts before your phone downloads them, so it’s their IP address that starts this process rather than yours. And if it’s really bizarre, you might not get any ads at all; this has happened to me on a few podcasts. They just throw to sponsors and immediately come back. That’s kinda nice.