• Ech@lemmy.ca
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    7 days ago

    *It’s no longer running*

    Friendly alert that it’s currently Bandcamp Friday - one full day that the site gives 100% of purchases to the artists. It’s a good way to support small artists and build up a personal collection.

    • Saurok@lemmy.ml
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      6 days ago

      The company that currently owns Bandcamp laid off all of the union bargaining team members when they acquired Bandcamp, or rather, didn’t extend an offer of employment to all of them which is effectively a layoff or firing. Just adding on to your comment so people are more aware, in case they need extra convincing to only buy from Bandcamp on that day (or preferably not at all). Purchase directly from artists whenever possible. Pretty sure those workers who were fired are still seeking resolution, and I don’t think Songtradr, the company that acquired Bandcamp, ever recognized the union even though they voted yes in their vote to unionize with OPEIU months before the acquisition. Go here for more info.

      • zarkanian@sh.itjust.works
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        6 days ago

        This right here is one of many reasons why you should download your purchases. Protect your collection from the inherent instability of capitalism.

        • Saurok@lemmy.ml
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          6 days ago

          Yup, enshittification comes for everything in the end. The profit motive takes no prisoners.

    • Psythik@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      That’s some bullshit right there. Every day should be Bandcamp Friday. I understand charging a small 1-3% fee to cover server costs, but nothing more. Otherwise Apple is just another evil record label profiting off of peoples’ talent.

      • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Server costs? I mean for a media serving website at this scale you need the servers, storage, people to run the servers, people to development the website, fix bugs, keep on top of security. If you had a very talented team that was very lean, and each member of which can wear multiple hats to reduce headcount, you’re talking $400-$600,000 a year just in salaries. Thats before you consider taxes, benefits, etc.

        Do you think bandcamp is run by like one guy renting bargain bin shared cpu servers from AWS?

        • Soup@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          The most entitled people are CEOs and right after them it’s people who think everything on the internet should be free and without ads.

      • Ech@lemmy.ca
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        8 days ago

        From what I can find, BC takes 15% for most sales, 10% for high-sellers. Dunno if that’s good or bad, but it seems low to me.

        • Eranziel@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          It’s certainly lower than the 20-30% game distribution platforms take.

          I can pretty much guarantee the server & staff costs are more than 1% of sticker price, especially since BC includes streaming services.

    • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      The absolute basics:

      1. Install qbittorrent
      2. Install a VPN and run it so that all your Internet traffic goes down it
      3. Open a Web browser and search for top torrent sites 2025. There are articles with lists of the big ones.
      4. Go to a torrent site and search for what you want.
      5. Download the .torrent file and open it in qbittorrent OR copy the magnet link and paste that into qbit torrent. Either will start your download.

      Always use the VPN when searching and downloading.

      There are lots of steps to make it more convenient - things like using a Virutal machine so the vpn and torrent do their thing while you do whatever else you want on your PC, or setting up a docker Servarr stack to make things more convenient, or setting up a Raspberry pi / other device as a servarr stack. But for the basics all you need is a torrent client, a VPN and a Web browser.

      All the extra advanced stuff is just quality of life, like being able to leave it downloading securely 24hours a day or organising your downloads better.

      • Psythik@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Edit: I know that torrent clients are a well-established paradigm—and that people are resilient to change—which is probably why you downvoted me. But Debrid services are some serious game changers, so needless to say I’m disappointed in you for just blindly downvoting without even giving them a try. You have no idea what you’re missing out on. 😔


        If you’re going to pay money to pirate, you might as well skip the VPN and qbittorrent and just get a Debrid service instead. This gets you direct downloads to any torrent at gigabit speeds, without having to wait for seeds. Debrid takes the torrent client completely out of the picture.

        All you do is copy and paste the magnet link into the Debrid site, and then directly download the torrent from your browser. It’s cheaper and much faster than a VPN + torrent client. And safer too because your ISP doesn’t see you sharing any illegal content (seeding the files is how they get you) nor using a VPN, so you can still pirate in places where VPNs are illegal. They just see you downloading large files from the internet. And since you’re not distributing anything (seeding), you’re staying within the law in most jurisdictions.

        The threatening letters from my ISP stopped completely after I ditched qbittorrent and switched to Debrid. More people need to know about this. It’s so much better than putting up with torrent clients, dealing with DNS/IP leaks, and waiting for seeds. Just copy/paste and download.

          • Psythik@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            Of course not, because there’s nothing to seed when you’re downloading a file directly from a server. I thought I already explained this.

        • zarkanian@sh.itjust.works
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          6 days ago

          I’m not “paying money to pirate”. I’m paying money for privacy, and filesharing is part of that. I would still be using a VPN even if everything I downloaded was public domain.

    • bigb@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Start out simple and stick with a basic BitTorrent client. Figure out where you want to download from and get a torrent client configured. I use an ISP that frowns upon piracy so here’s a quick overview:

      1. Look for public torrent sites. I’m out of this game so I don’t have any suggestions.
      2. Research private torrent trackers. I don’t think I can provide any help with this, but there are other corners of Lemmy who can.
      3. Find a VPN. Everyone has thoughts on this and Proton VPN is the one I’m currently using.
      4. Pick a torrent client. I’d recommend qBittorrent myself.
      5. Configure your VPN to include your BT traffic.

      If/when you want to try Lidarr, you’ll be much better off knowing the basics of BitTorrent because *arr software is confusing in its own regard. Lidarr is just a tool to organize your music library folders and also automatically queue downloads. It is not a requirement to enjoy downloading music.

      Usenet and soulseek are other alternatives.

  • Griffus@lemmy.zip
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    7 days ago

    I simply just installed Metrolist on my phone.

    100 % piracy robbing musicians, but more importantly, robbing Google while circumventing Spotify altogether.

    • bigb@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      You’ll have to be more specific. :) I think it works well for organizing a music library unless there are issues with this feature that I’m unaware of. Using it to queue downloads was painful for me, so I resort to less automated ways to acquire music files.

      Simply put, the *arr software concept works well for downloading movies and TV shows (Radarr and Sonarr). Music just seems to be a little more difficult and I have lots of issues with Lidarr finding music out on Usenet and trackers. I hope that’s user error on my part.

  • Pzulu@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    It is laziness on my part. I want to tell the Google home to play music.

    I should just get a Bluetooth speaker and do this, shouldn’t I

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      You need the software, but there’s nothing about that request that should require access to the Internet.

      I have a LLM chatbot that controls my Home Assistant and Kodi players. It’s all done locally and the response time is under a second.

      On my PC(Arch, btw) I have a global hotkey so I can hold the key to record a message and when I let go of the key it uses a local model to do speech to text and sends the result to the chatbot.

      I could probably use a wake word but I’d need to mic up my house and I’d rather not do that. A bluetooth lapel mic and a single button Bluetooth “keyboard” about the size of a key switch (using an ESP32C3 microcontroller) give me the same functionality.

  • Phegan@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I have also moved fully to navidrome. It’s slightly less convenient, but it’s worth it to deplarform

  • muhyb@programming.dev
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    8 days ago

    I guess I can be proud of not getting into Spotify at the first place. Instead of discovering new music, I discover older ones which I find more reliable since new music industry mostly suck. Oh, also Bandcamp is fine for discovering indie.

      • muhyb@programming.dev
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        6 days ago

        Yeah, I never needed Spotify. It’s either my friends recommend me something or I make my own research, since I like music from many different countries. Sure I don’t randomly learn new ones much but that’s okay.

      • muhyb@programming.dev
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        8 days ago

        That’s my nostalgia talking but what I hear in public is bad, I mean in malls, stores, shops etc. maybe they have a bad taste though. By the way I said the industry sucks not the music. Because of the industry, they’re much shorter now (thanks to Spotify I guess), I hardly find a 45 minutes album with whole great tracks.

  • ProfessorScience@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Does navidrome support Chromecast? I’ve had a hard time finding a self hosted music solution that will actual cast. I do have a public facing domain name with certs that, as far as I can tell, is working correctly.

  • lemonaz@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I know the main topic is ditching Spotify, but on the secondary topic of screwing over Spotify…

    I realized that you can “pirate” Spotify (i.e. listen indefinitely as if you had a paid account) if you have uBlock Origin on Edge. No setup needed, it just works. Most likely any Chromium-like browser will work.

    Unfortunately, I haven’t got it to work with Zen browser which is Firefox based so I’m not sure if all Firefox based browsers are affected. The workaround I have for now is just have Edge open with Spotify in the background, and control it from the Spotify interface on Zen. Never download the app, they control that fully.

    Funnily enough, I also got ad-free Spotify play on Amazon Echo when I was controlling it from Edge, though I never tried with Zen because I don’t use Echo anymore.

    PS: For audiophiles this is probably not gonna fly, as you don’t have access to the highest bit rates iirc.