![]() ![]() ![]() Without them, I feel genuinely uncertain as to what to do (I’ll check them later). Give me your thoughts before you check them, and then check them if you like. I wouldn’t doubt if it also went against their terms of agreement. Getting an app that does for free what Spotify expects to be paid for seems unethical. Spotify expects you to become a subscriber to remove the ads. One friend said it’s no different from an ad-blocker in your browser, and he noted that one of the reasons we use ad-blockers is the objectionable content (like the pop music ads on Spotify) that we don’t want to see.Īnother friend said there’s a difference between ad-blocking in the browser and silencing ads in Spotify: “I hate the work of them that turn aside it shall not cleave to me.” Instead of occasional ads for the latest chart-topping album, I get a few seconds of peaceful silence-thanks to Spotifree.īut the presence of bad ads doesn’t justify stealing, and isn’t that what I’m doing when I listen to Spotify’s music while silencing its main source of revenue? I may be one of only a small number of people doing this, but I never bought that argument from Napster afficionados, and I won’t buy it from myself. No more interruptions to Rachmaninoff from pop stars hawking their latest immoralities and inanities. It’s a little app that basically silences the commercials. I like the amazing free-music player Spoti fy, and Spoti free has made it a more enjoyable experience. So here’s one for you, and I really want to see some careful, scripturally informed wisdom here: is it ethical to use Spotifree? You probably try to think more deeply about your biblical faith and its implications than the average pew-sitter, or you’d be watching TV right now. If you read my blog, you’re probably a Christian.
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