Free Spotify users: you could soon get the shaft

Spotify

Listeners who enjoy free, unlimited access on Spotify might not enjoy it for much longer. According to Digital Music News, the company could soon limit the number of songs non-subscribers can listen to.

Spotify will be entering negotiations with the big three major record labels in October - Sony Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group - and it's possible that a solid plan will be in place to give premium subscribers more and free users less.

Missing out

The driving force then is apparently to make "the free users to feel like they're missing something, not just forced to listen to ads," DMN quotes one source as saying. Spotify is reportedly looking to convert more of the 50-odd million Spotify Free listeners to the Premium service.

During Spotify's May event in NYC, CEO Daniel Ek, took the stage to talk about how video, as strange a venture as it is for the music streaming service, will makes it way to users.

Spotify itself though is refusing to dignify this latest report with a response, while Ek also went on record last month stating free music could actually grow the industry by a factor of ten compared with its current size.

"If we build the revenue model around 'freemium'," Ek told The Guardian, "the music industry will be much larger than it's ever been before, more artists will be able to make a living by being artists and more people will listen in turn."

Ek equates Spotify Free with the radio industry, itself a historically free, ad-supported medium.

But with the amount of money the likes of Apple Music and Google have to back their own offerings it's an increasingly competitive arena to be operating in.

Via Engadget

Cameron Faulkner

Cameron is a writer at The Verge, focused on reviews, deals coverage, and news. He wrote for magazines and websites such as The Verge, TechRadar, Practical Photoshop, Polygon, Eater and Al Bawaba.