128 pointsby voxadam7 hours ago16 comments
  • akersten5 hours ago
    But you can't even download the allegedly infringing material from the .org site. You can just read about it? So they're abusing the All Writs Act to take down a site that they think is related to some undetermined future nebulously bad thing for their business. If I wasn't on Anna's side before, I sure am now.
    • surround4 hours ago
      Anna's Archive announced they intended to infringe on the label's copyrights by distributing their music without a license. The law allows the court "to prevent or restrain infringement of a copyright" (emphasis mine).

      https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/502#:~:text=Any%2...

    • perihelions4 hours ago
      > "think is related to some undetermined future nebulously bad thing"

      Anna's Archive made threats in writing to distribute, concretely and specifically, the plaintiff's copyrighted works as torrents.

      • 4 hours ago
        undefined
    • snowmobile4 hours ago
      > think is related to some undetermined future nebulously bad thing for their business

      The thing in question being "we copied all your data and are now gonna release it for free". I like what Anna's is doing, but come on! This is dishonest communication if I've ever seen it!

    • bbor5 hours ago

        If I wasn't on Anna's side before, I sure am now.
      
      A) You're quite the poet!

      B) We should all be on Anna's side if we're to live up this board's name even a little bit: https://archive.org/stream/GuerillaOpenAccessManifesto/Goamj...

    • cyanydeez5 hours ago
      unless you have a billion dollars, not sure anyone cares what side you're on.

      Voting with your wallet no longer really matters does it unless your wallet is attached to a billion dollar stock portfolio.

    • crazygringo5 hours ago
      > that they think is related to some undetermined future nebulously bad thing

      I mean, Anna's Archive was pretty clear about the future bad thing.

      Spotify didn't "think", it wasn't just "related", nothing was "undetermined" or "nebulous".

      Anna's Archive explicitly announced they were going to start distributing Spotify's music files. It's not even a case of hosting links to torrents but not seeding -- no, they were going to be doing the seeding too. You can't get more clear-cut than that.

      I'm not taking anybody's side here, as to what copyright law ought to be, but Spotify isn't abusing the legal process here.

      • Supermancho5 hours ago
        > Anna's Archive explicitly announced they were going to start distributing Spotify's music files. It's not even a case of hosting links to torrents but not seeding -- no, they were going to be doing the seeding too. You can't get more clear-cut than that.

        You can get more "clear cut" than that. You could rule when there were damages or law was actually broken. Committing a crime is not the same as saying you will commit a crime. ie. I will rob the bank on the Chase Bank Kraemer Branch in Orange County. Now try and prosecute me. Yes, I understand this would fall under criminal vs civil. The issue is about the law being applied in the way the benefits the ones with the most money, more often than not, violating equal protections and further eroding public confidence in the US legal system.

        • crazygringo5 hours ago
          > Actually committing a crime is not the same as saying you will commit a crime.

          No, but it can have a lot of legal repercussions, like restraining orders, you can be arrested for making a threat, search warrants may be issued... and in the case of corporations, restraining orders and injunctions. Like here. This is all very standard stuff. There's absolutely nothing exceptional about the court process in this particular case.

          • johnnyanmac4 hours ago
            >On January 2, the music companies asked for a temporary restraining order, and the court granted it the same day.

            That pretty much tells me all about what courts care about. Can't get TRO's when the government is attacking its people, but when there's a sniff of sharing music? Instant hammer.

            EDIT: to answer a response I got about "courts aren't supposed to 'care'", that's the point of a TRO:

            >To obtain a TRO, a party must convince the judge that they will suffer immediate irreparable injury unless the order is issued.

            TRO's are rare and losing it just means you need to wait for the actual court case. That's why I'm making such a big deal of this. Getting a TRO the same day because maybe one day some website will have archives of music files just shows how out of touch the justice system is with tech.

            • 3 hours ago
              undefined
            • hirako20004 hours ago
              Law is made of people and politics touches everything.

              Even with separate of powers, lobbies make sure those they represent get good treatments.

              • johnnyanmac4 hours ago
                I guess this is a naive question, but where are the lobbies that care about the people? Or even common decency at this point? It really feels like people are treating the US less as an investment and more like a sinking ship to abandon. And they were the ones that shot the holes to begin with.
  • 1vuio0pswjnm78 minutes ago
    I had guessed it was the WorldCat litigation as Tucows, one of the defendant's registrars, was receiving copies of the pleadings

    In that case, the issue of whether "scraping" is a tort under Ohio law seems to be unsettled and the question has been submitted to the Ohio Supreme Court

    Anyway, it appears that the largest consumers of these archives are "AI" companies

    I have read that Spotify is already full of "AI"-generated garbage

  • cdrnsf5 hours ago
    Pretty ironic considering they bootstrapped the service with pirated music. But they've never actually cared about music — they started as an ad platform and music was the cheapest option for them to attract eyeballs.
    • holmesworcester5 hours ago
      "Spotify" literally means "put ads on things".

      It's not obvious to US English speakers but "spot" was ad industry jargon and became the word for "TV commercial" in several European languages. It's so gross that this ever slid through as a brand for a music app. We've descended so far...Music app branding started with Wesley Willis jokes!

      • crazygringo5 hours ago
        That's a fun theory but there's no evidence that was their intention with the name...

        From what they've said, it's about "spotting" and "identifying" music and music trends. But it seems like mostly it was just a somewhat nonsense word that was easy to remember and whose domain name was available.

        Especially since it's popular as a paid service without ads.

        • bbor5 hours ago
          I love random folk etymologies, especially when they posit sinister conspiracies along the way -- thanks for the concise correction. Wikipedia confirms on both counts:

            According to Ek, the company's title was initially misheard from a name shouted by Lorentzon. Later they conceived a portmanteau of "spot" and "identify".
          
          It also kinda blows my mind how common it is to listen to a ton of Spotify without paying, NGL! It just seems like such an absurd value proposition to me, even now as it matures from its growth days. All music??
          • hirako20004 hours ago
            In any case they have an agreement with copyright holders. Anna Archive does not.

            IP laws are broken, keep extending protection, and do not prevent distribution exclusivity.

            I could sell a license to Bob who can sell my arts to you. But I won't give a license to Alice to even be able to enjoy the art for the fee I charged Bob, and I can tell Bob to do the same and not give it away to Alice at any cost. The law would say that's fine, and let's even arrest Bob if he ever sells to Alice.

      • asveikau5 hours ago
        My first language is US English and I am familiar with that usage of the word "spot", but didn't make the connection to "Spotify" until reading your comment.

        This reminds me of the phenomenon of imported words being used in another language, but using a less common definitions of the word. For example I'm told "Oldtimer" is a vintage car in German, but most Americans would say it was an older or experienced person. Maybe "Spotify" could also mean something giving you acne.

    • surround5 hours ago
      Wikipedia says

        Ek's initial pitch to Lorentzon was not initially related to music, but rather a way for streaming content such as video, digital films, images or music to drive advertising revenue.
      
      So yes, they were always intending to get revenue from ads. And yes, the initial pitch included other types of media too. But I don't think we can call Spotify "an ad platform" that "never actually cared about music" any more than we could call Ars Technica "an ad platform that never actually cared about tech news."
    • 5 hours ago
      undefined
  • dang6 hours ago
    Recent and related. Others?

    Anna's Archive loses .org domain after surprise suspension - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46497164 - Jan 2026 (358 comments)

    Spotify reportedly investigating Anna's Archive's scraping of their library - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46355793 - Dec 2025 (82 comments)

    Backing up Spotify - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46338339 - Dec 2025 (701 comments)

    • amatecha4 hours ago
      IMO also recent and related: NVIDIA Contacted Anna’s Archive to Secure Access to Millions of Pirated Books - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46677628 - Jan 2026 (153 comments)
      • johnnyanmac3 hours ago
        Pretty much where we are in the world. You can scrape copyrighted works and re-jigger them in your own database to spit out a fascimile of art. But you can't "point" to where these scapers are going.
  • themafia5 hours ago
    I don't understand the sealing and ex-parte motions in this case. It looks completely corrupt. They're claiming that the archive would have released all the material publicly if they were allowed to know an injunction was about to be filed against them.

    Yet all those songs certainly have illegal copies already being distributed on the internet. So what was the actual harm being prevented here? I cannot understand how they hoodwinked a court into this misguided procedure.

    • thenaturalist5 hours ago
      The harm being done is millions of dollars for VCs and music studios.

      Billionaires and enterprises want to see consumers spending to return their investment.

      The presence of other - dispersed - illegal material doesn’t diminish said returns too much, this central dump would have set precedent and had garnered massive attention.

      This is the capitalist way.

    • snowmobile4 hours ago
      > They're claiming that the archive would have released all the material publicly if they were allowed to know an injunction was about to be filed against them.

      I mean, the archive themselves publicly stated their intention to release all the material, without reference to any injunction. So the implication is trivially true, as a logician would say.

    • crazygringo5 hours ago
      > Yet all those songs certainly have illegal copies already being distributed on the internet. So what was the actual harm being prevented here?

      There's a huge difference between a ton of individual torrents or files you need to individually search for, identify, of varying quality, that may be mislabeled and have other sorts of quality issues, and which in no way approach "all" music...

      ...vs a single, shockingly comprehensive repository of uniformly high-quality music which does, in fact, approach "all" music.

      If I wanted to start a pirate music service, it would become vastly easier with this particular repository. Many orders of magnitude easier. That's the actual harm.

      • queenkjuul5 hours ago
        Lossless pirate archives also still exist if you know where to look. Not saying you're wrong, but from a truly material angle, someone dedicated to finding an archive with enough music to start a pirate site need only join one of the existing lossless pirate sites and copy theirs. I don't see how Anna's making it easier negates the fact that it can already be done
        • s1artibartfast4 hours ago
          I dont think the idea that it can be already done matters though. You just have to show harm or intent to harm, and the archive had it.

          Selective prosecution isn't a strong defense in civil court.

          • johnnyanmac3 hours ago
            For a normal case, maybe. for a TRO, it does matter. And they got a TRO the same day they asked on Jan 2nd. That's an oddly concerning move.
  • endofreach6 hours ago
    what‘s in it for spotify? i can‘t think of a single person who‘d stop paying for streaming services (music) in favour of going back to illegally download or (or even legally purchase) songs & managing their own library. m a y b e some devs would. but those thinking about it, wouldn‘t be stopped like that. i am thinking about it, yet i just renewed my subscription because i lack time & motivation to crawl down yet another rabbit hole of diy.
    • ezst5 hours ago
      I will never START paying for Spotify. I like my music and so I like to know my music, I have no problem curating my collection, chasing rare works for artists I really like. I enjoy the process, I enjoy the result, I enjoy that I own it. I really don't see why I would rather spend hundreds a year for the privilege of owning nothing at all in the end, while being prescribed what I shall listen to, when and where.
      • lukan5 hours ago
        My old mp3 collection is too big for my mobile phone and I did not set up a private streaming solution yet. So out of convenience, I also used spotify. Stream anywhere anything is nice.

        And I did enjoy finding new artists through the algorithm there .. but I do made up my mind about letting go of the concenience and owning all my music again. It is a big effort, though and I don't enjoy it so much like you.

      • brailsafe2 hours ago
        Seems like a reasonable hobby, people love doing this, but idk that not doing something you already wouldn't be inclined to do carries much weight.

        Almost like how people who haven't moved out of their hometown cite all sorts of reasons or apparent faults of the place they haven't moved to, like it's too expensive; it's too rainy; it's too busy; it's not sunny enough; but really, they weren't in the business of leaving anyway, because they're comfortable or don't know how to make friends, or they stubbornly try to love a place they actually hate, or they have family there and a support structure, or they have no ambition, or they actually just like the place. Either way, the moving goalposts and random critiques don't matter, it's not the hypothetical destination's burden to court someone who won't make that leap anyway, but there may be a select few fence sitters who are just waiting for a push.

        I don't think Spotify's main objective is to persuade hobbyist music collectors to stop, but rather it's to persuade people who want to access music anywhere to pay for the service, which may or may not be someone forced to ditch their vinyl collection or Zune. Voting with your wallet only matters if the service you actually might pay for or are paying for stops being a compelling product.

    • rjh295 hours ago
      I'm old enough to have an mp3 collection, so I haven't needed spotify. They don't have 20% of the tracks in my playlist and their integration of local audio has been steadily eroded to be almost unusable now (i.e. it's completely separate, doesn't show up in regular search, playlists etc.). They also push audiobooks and sponsored results in my face even on the Premium subscription, and their UI sucks.

      If you already have a collection and are reasonably content in what you listen to, topping it up with a few albums a year is not that hard.

      Or just use youtube music!

      • asveikau5 hours ago
        Even if you have an mp3 collection, the streaming apps are good for discovery, recommendations, and generating playlists.

        There are probably good local solutions for the last one especially, but a convenient UI that's already on all your devices helps.

        • rjh295 hours ago
          Absolutely - although the free plan (or free trial) of Spotify/YouTube are good enough for that.

          Spotify is certainly convenient especially being multi-device, but after a few months you've probably exhausted its recommendations.

    • snowmobile6 hours ago
      Many people are cancelling Spotify among my friends, even very "non-technical" folks. For me I've just gone back to radio or Youtube:ing a few songs for free here and there. Paying the cost of a lunch every month is just not worth it anymore for subscription services.
      • ulrashida5 hours ago
        Exactly this. Increasing prices with worsening service and feature bloat combined with questionable ethics made it an easy decision to cancel.
      • kilroy1235 hours ago
        I know people who recently canceled, but I think it has more to do with them raising the price.
        • snowmobile5 hours ago
          Yeah I'm not saying my friends who cancelled are going to torrent music like it's the 2000's, but when so much music is freely available on the web, why pay? For me it was mainly that the app kept getting worse though.
      • parpfish5 hours ago
        This is also a big party of why artists don’t earn shit.

        Spotify will never be able to pay out enough if people don’t think this music is worth paying for.

        They want access to every new album but refuse to pay how much a single new CD would have cost back in the day

        • pluralmonad5 hours ago
          Aside from all the middle men nibbling at artist take, its also a symptom of trading on fundamentally un-scarce resources. A better business model is selling access to the scarce things like the artist themselves. Trying to maintain stranglehold on a particular order of zeros and ones is always going to be tough.
          • parpfish4 hours ago
            That’s part of the reason that artists have made a bigger push toward selling merch as a means of making a living. But that feels so arbitrary and unsustainable to me.

            Why should I buy a tshirt from somebody because I like their music? Fashion design is its own unrelated art form.

        • johnnyanmac2 hours ago
          Spotify is a model where the artist suffers, the company itself works on a slim margin, and the record labels gets the lion's share. It's pretty much the worst case scenario business.

          The issue even goes back to the days of CD's. The artist still wouldn't get that much back compared to the label publishing the disc. even in 2000 is was still more profitable to buy a tshirt than a CD from the artist.

          I'm not very well versed in this area, but clearly something needs to change. Being able to independently published helps, but Spotify's model does indeed make it harder to sell your own albums despite it being easier than ever to distribute it without a middleman.

        • doesnt_know5 hours ago
          Every entertainment market is saturated. Even if every creative endeavour stopped now, there would still be more freely available content to last more then any individual human life span.

          Unless you’re the type of person that actively considers them a fan of something and goes out of their way to consume a specific niche, there isn’t much reason to pay much, or anything for entertainment.

          • johnnyanmac2 hours ago
            >Unless you’re the type of person that actively considers them a fan of something

            to be fair, that's a billion dollar business of an audience. Bandcamp is still a thing because people like that exist. So I wouldn't readily dismiss that.

            But yes. We're in an age where people treat TV shows as "second screen entertainment", the silver screen is dying out, and where Spotify is flooding its library with white noise and AI slop. And people at best shrug. There's never been less respect for the arts, and it reflects in wider consumer patterns. Any future artists will need to appeal to a shrinkingly few fanbase of those who care about quality.

        • writebetterc5 hours ago
          > This is also a big party of why artists don’t earn shit.

          The pie that Spotify divides up among the artists is a global one. It's not like you listen to one artist, so they get your 10 bucks every month. You're paying Taylor Swift, even though you never listen to her.

          • parpfish5 hours ago
            Their prorata payment scheme isn’t inherently good or bad.

            If I listen to obscure indie band all month, some of my money will go to Taylor swift. But all those swifties are also paying obscure indie band.

            • johnnyanmac2 hours ago
              it's not bad by itself, but I argue the opaque structure of it is horrendous. Especially in financial matters, you should be able to estimate how much money you get if you put X effort in and get Y metrics. But even getting a proper Y isn't straightforward, let alone Z payout.
    • cdrnsf5 hours ago
      I run a Navidrome server I stream my own music from. I tag everything with Mp3tag and have a shell script to organize and upload the tagged files. Not all of the music I listen to regularly is on Spotify and their treatment of artists is abominable.
      • subdavis5 hours ago
        How much piracy do you do?
        • cdrnsf5 hours ago
          I've ripped and archived CDs for well over a decade, purchase from Bandcamp and — if I can't find a way to buy it — I'll find it and buy a shirt or something from the band as directly as possible.
    • whywhywhywhy5 hours ago
      >what‘s in it for spotify?

      Their relationship with the labels

    • crazygringo5 hours ago
      > what‘s in it for spotify?

      Honestly, Spotify itself probably couldn't care less, for the obvious reasons you say.

      But the music labels sure do. Their contracts with Spotify surely require it to implement appropriate DRM, stop all attempted piracy, etc. If Spotify wants to be on good negotiating terms with labels, they have absolutely no choice but to take as much legal action as possible.

    • themafia5 hours ago
      Cozy secondary relationships with music labels. Payola goes one way and industry demands go the other.

      Since "owners" take such a big chunk (50%) of paid royalties for streaming there is a strong incentive to only play music that is "owned" by labels and not directly by artists and performers. Controlling the number of "spins" an song or album of theirs gets is still a huge concern of the labels.

      • troupo4 hours ago
        > here is a strong incentive to only play music that is "owned" by labels and not directly by artists and performers.

        Spotify has exactly zero music "directly by artists and performers". Even indie artists have to go through distributors and labels. Because without "owners" that own 60-80% of all world music, and that Spotify pays 70% of revenue to there would be no Spotify (or any music streaming service).

        • crtasman hour ago
          You don't need to hand over any ownership or % of earnings if you self-publish and pay a distributor to put your album on the streaming platforms.
    • protocolture4 hours ago
      Spotify cancelled my subscription. I started off with a Spotify partner subscription with my wife, which grandfathered into some other thing, like a family subscription, and then whatever I had got cancelled. Meanwhile I found a new local radio station has started playing 60% of what I like, some new (to me) joint venture thats a web first marketing company and they bought a bunch of radio stations to add local radio advertising to their list of services. Between spotify with ads, radio with ads, I am listening to radio, while planning out how to most easily go back to just having my favourites on my phone or maybe even an mp3 player.
    • sdoering5 hours ago
      IF I were still a Spotify user - this would be the nail in the coffin. Not that the founder wouldn't give me enough reason. But they lost me due to other reasons.

      I am still paying for streaming, though. Still. Not sure if it is really worth it - and once I have my local mp3 collection available for myself - not sure, if I need a paid streaming service. I am getting too old and I return more and more to the songs I grew up with. And to be honest - if I would be missing anything, I could easily yt-dlp it, store it on my server and have it available ti myself via self hosted streaming.

      I am loosing more and more interest in streaming. For video and music.

    • Retr0id5 hours ago
      I think the main use-case for the metadata-enriched 300TB archive is training AI models like suno. Anyone torrenting music for personal consumption had higher quality sources available already.
      • johnnyanmac2 hours ago
        NVidia seems to agree: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46677628

        Their response to litigation?

        > NVIDIA defended its actions as fair use, noting that books are nothing more than statistical correlations to its AI models.

        It's barely veiled these days how little they care for art.

    • 5 hours ago
      undefined
    • have_faith5 hours ago
      I cancelled my Spotify the other day in favour of listening to my own archive. I’m admittedly an outlier though.
    • CryptoBanker5 hours ago
      Perhaps worried about downloads being used for training music models
      • hsbauauvhabzb5 hours ago
        Can’t have competitors when they inevitably move in that direction themselves.
    • jrflowers5 hours ago
      I put Rockbox on a non-techie friend’s new mp3 player just the other day. Some folks absolutely went back to buying/pirating music after the whole Spotify playing ads for ICE thing. It’s apparently fun curating a collection like in the olden days, and sites like fmhy have gotten pretty popular recently.
    • s1artibartfast4 hours ago
      I would go back in an instant. I think a lot of people would if it is convenient. Furthermore, all someone has to do is make a Spotify clone to interact with the archive and you have consumed their entire business.

      Even if you didnt want a DIY solution, I bet you would accept a free clone, along with every other customer

    • troupo4 hours ago
      You have to first find spotify in the court docs: https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.65...

          ATLANTIC RECORDING CORPORATION;
          ATLANTIC MUSIC GROUP LLC; BAD
          BOY RECORDS LLC; ELEKTRA
          ENTERTAINMENT LLC; ELEKTRA
          ENTERTAINMENT GROUP INC.; FUELED
          BY RAMEN LLC; WARNER MUSIC
          INTERNATIONAL SERVICES LIMITED;
          WARNER RECORDS INC.; WARNER
          RECORDS LLC; SONY MUSIC
          ENTERTAINMENT; ARISTA MUSIC;
          ARISTA RECORDS, LLC; ZOMBA
          RECORDING LLC; UMG RECORDINGS,
          INC.; CAPITOL RECORDS, LLC; and
          SPOTIFY USA INC.,
      
             Plaintiffs,
      
      ANd then you could read the decision https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.65...:

          Factual Background - III
      
          The Record Company Plaintiffs’ business model relies
          in significant part on the licensing of their catalogs of sound recordings
          to legitimate streaming services like Spotify.
      
      IMO Spotify couldn't care less. The actual owners of music care.
    • queenkjuul4 hours ago
      Lol i say it to my friends all the time, "if music were as easy to pirate as 20 years ago I'd already be back"

      Credit where it's due, Spotify made it a lot harder to find pirated music in good quality

  • ronsor7 hours ago
    Unfortunately for Spotify, court orders are ineffective against foreign nationals sharing information. Copyright enforcement is as futile as the encryption "export restrictions" the US and other countries tried in the 90s and early 2000s.
    • snowmobile5 hours ago
      Since they don't "own" the data they lost, only "rent" it, they probably have to be seen doing something about it, lest they face the wrath of record companies.
      • JasonADrury5 hours ago
        I have a really hard time imagining the record companies giving a shit about this, this isn't a pre-release leak. All the valuable content is already freely and easily available for download on the internet.
        • Nextgrid5 hours ago
          It's performance art all the way down - it repeatedly states they are not happy about piracy and will come after anyone doing it.

          This isn't aimed at pirates as much as it's aimed at non-pirates, especially companies with significant assets.

          They know full well pirates don't care, but it's a message to any company or entity seen as "too friendly" with pirates or that enables pirates to do their thing.

        • johnnyanmac2 hours ago
          The PR of being "hard on pirates" matters a lot more than any losses they may take, imagined or otherwise. I just hate how fast courts will act on this compared to matters of literal life and death.
    • cryzinger5 hours ago
      Yeah, but TFA notes how Anna's Archive is dependent on US-based infrastructure, including Cloudflare.

      As much as I love Anna's Archive, I feel like this Spotify move was a misstep on their part. The music industry seems far scarier than the publishing industry when it comes to copyright suits, which means they have a lot to lose here by poking the bear, but there are already plenty of places to find pirated music, which means they also don't have much to gain.

      • snowmobile4 hours ago
        It's a cool publicity stunt for Anna's, and perhaps the hackers responsible for getting the data simply wanted to show it off and leave Spotify with some egg on their face. I know I wouldn't be able to stop myself from publishing it if I was in their position, foolish as it may be.
  • Paracompact5 hours ago
    Can anyone recommend a music discovery service that isn't garbage? I fled to Spotify from Pandora because it kept recommending me the exact same songs, but now Spotify does basically the same thing.

    In the age of machine learning, I'm really surprised there aren't superhuman music recommendation algorithms. Or maybe there are, and these algorithms simply don't serve the corporate interests. But then where are the open-source alternatives?

    • lolive40 minutes ago
      I still pay for Spotify, but nowadays 99% of my music consumption are local FM radios, plus mainstream webradios [radioParadise, FIP, BBC6, NTS]. I sometimes Shazam things, but rarely have the time to listen them back on Spotify. My attention time is limited by other things [:those stupid real-life stuff every normal person was praising in the old times: kids, family, work, burnout, failing cars, gardenning. And sleep!]
      • lolive35 minutes ago
        And then what’s the next comeback, you boomer? BBS? Tabletop roleplaying-games? Reading books? #comeOooon
    • chneu4 hours ago
      It seems like they all do the loop eventually.

      I liked Tidal's recommendations.

      I went back to last.fm, music stores, friends recommendations, and music/TV scores(a lot of good movie sound folks are amazing musicians).

    • miriam_catira4 hours ago
      I've heard good things about Tidal (https://tidal.com) but it's not open source afaik.
    • troupo4 hours ago
      > In the age of machine learning, I'm really surprised there aren't superhuman music recommendation algorithms.

      Because music is extremely hard to quantify. What do you quantify it on? See https://everynoise.com/ (the mess on the page is quantifying by just three or four out of 17 IIRC parameters) and their small doc on it: https://everynoise.com/EverynoiseIntro.pdf

      And doing that at scale across hundreds of millions of users quickly becomes prohibitively expensive. So companies simplify, and reach for simpler solutions, unfortunately.

  • crumpled5 hours ago
    The Wikipedia page for Anna's archive was a lot more helpful leading people to the goods than the .org domain was.

    Anna always knew the .org domain was vulnerable. Why wouldn't they?

  • xmonkee5 hours ago
    Technical question: I run my own Pi hole dns server. Is it possible to just add an A record for it? What are you guys doing to get around this?
  • zouhair4 hours ago
    All in all Copyright did and is doing is more harm anything else.
  • franze5 hours ago
    Deezer has in its onboarding flow a pretty cool "get your lists from spotify" feature. from all liked/currated songs - a few thousands - it could not match about 2.
    • walthamstow5 hours ago
      You can also download FLAC or 320k MP3 from Deezer with deemix.
    • hollow-moe3 hours ago
      Tried moving there something like a year ago, the service didn't work at all, iirc the UI was awful and confusing and once I got around it, there was a lot of my tracks that couldn't be imported. I hate that Spotify is the one service I still can't part with, self-hosting nextcloud emails and such.
    • DyslexicAtheist5 hours ago
      could you expand on this please? if I understood correctly then Deezer fails to match songs from a list of thousands? thanks
      • xvokcarts5 hours ago
        I understood it as out of a few thousand songs, Deezer only failed to match 2.
  • seany5 hours ago
    Why aren't they distributing things via i2p or something like it instead of clearnet?
    • hermanzegerman2 hours ago
      That's what I'm also always asking myself. Same thing with NexusSTC
  • alessandroberna5 hours ago
    Seems that the Spotify torrents are now unavailable until further notice. bummer
    • seized2 hours ago
      The music one was never available but the metadata one can be found and still works.
  • heraldgeezer5 hours ago
    Funny how .se is up