“Wherever you get your podcasts” is a radical statement

[…] being able to say, “wherever you get your podcasts” is a radical statement. Because what it represents is the triumph of exactly the kind of technology that’s supposed to be impossible: open, empowering tech that’s not owned by any one company, that can’t be controlled by any one company, and that allows people to have ownership over their work and their relationship with their audience.

What podcasting holds in the promise of its open format is the proof that an open web can still thrive and be relevant, that it can inspire new systems that are similarly open to take root and grow.

BreakDecks,

If only we didn’t have gigantic centralized podcast hosts like Libsyn that also platform Neo-Nazis…

TengoDosVacas,

It’s only radical if it is not preceeded by “Apple podcasts, Spotify,…”

Pratai,

It’s no more radical than saying… “wherever you get your gasoline.” It’s just a thing to say because theres more than one source, and there being more than one source is not radical.

Edmund_Across_The_Room,

No?

There’s only a handful of places you can get gasoline? It’s almost entirely controlled by a few companies who control the majority of the pipeline.

You can’t buy directly from the people making the oil.

A better example for the point you’re trying to make is “whenever you get your apples”.

CileTheSane,
@CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

It’s just a thing to say because theres more than one source, and there being more than one source is not radical.

The closest thing to podcasts is probably TV. You can’t say “available wherever you stream television” because everything is exclusive to a different service. You can’t even say “available wherever audiobooks are sold” for similar reasons. EPIC is trying to make the same thing true for video games as much as they can as well.

It is worth pointing out that entertainment does not have to be (and should not be) exclusive to a singular middleman.

Randomgal,

Nothing radical about that. For 90% of people “Wherever you get your podcasts” means Apple, Spotify or YouTube. It has nothing to do with the win of freedom, it has to do with saving time to the speaker and listener. Same as with gas, as the other guy said.

CileTheSane,
@CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

Apple, Spotify or YouTube

Or. Instead of “only on Netflix” and “only on Amazon Prime” and “only in Disney+”.

dipshit,

upvote this wherever you get your federated content.

cypherpunks,
@cypherpunks@lemmy.ml avatar

Anil Dash is posting on threads?! lmao 🤡

Holzkohlen,

AntennaPod (OpenSource) and I subscribe to RSS feeds. How else would you do it? Spotify? That crap can’t even reliably store where I paused last time.

Fedizen,

As a devoted AntennaPod user, it works damn well.

aulin, (edited )

Ooh. Nice! I hadn’t heard of AntennaPod before. It seems to have everything that I use in Pocket Casts except for trim silence. I will try it out for a while and see if I miss that. I do use it and it saves a lot of time. Still though, OSS is a big draw.

Edit: It also doesn’t open the queue or start playing automatically in Android Auto.

JoshuaFalken,

After reading your comment, I checked my Pocket Casts stats page and it looks like between the skipping, variable speed (1.5-2x), and trimmed silence (mad max), I save nearly 20% of listening time with the majority of that being the silence trimming.

Might be an outlier, but with daily podcast listening, trimming is important enough to keep me on Pocket Casts, even though AntennaPod is attractive given it’s open source nature.

aulin,

You made me check. Since August 2018, I’ve cut about 1d using variable speed, and 1.5d using silence trimming. I’m only using mild at the moment, and have used medium before, but mad max was too much for my taste. But since I’ve listened for 83d, silence trimming is a <2% saving for me, so it might not mean much.

Edit: I do use it extensively specifically when catching up on the backlog of a podcast. So it probably accounts for way more during those times.

JoshuaFalken,

Sounds like my usage is just different to yours. I can’t remember why but I got accustomed to listening to audio at increased speed around a decade ago and slowly cranked it up to the point that now I can follow certain people’s conversations slightly higher than 2x. Only with voices and cadence I’m familiar with though. Any guests on a show can really throw me off.

The silence trimming aspect is a bit absurd honestly. It makes laughter sound almost all the same and robotic; you have to infer where comedic, dramatic, or thoughtful pauses in the speech are; and if there’s a more rapid fire back and forth in the conversation it can be tricky to follow. Although that last point doesn’t happen with podcasts where all the speakers record separately and it’s edited together to be coherent.

If you listen to a lot of shows, with hundreds of hours of episodes, it’s worth dialing up as much as you can stand. Then again, if I didn’t have two dozen podcasts with decades of backlog, I sure wouldn’t be listening at auctioneer pace.

aulin,

Correcting myself here. AntennaPod does have silence trimming, but it’s neither a player button nor in settings, but in a …-menu at the top of the player, which made it a bit hard to find (Same can be said about some settings in Pocket Casts.) and there’s no graduation, so it’s mad max only, from how it sounds.

h3rm17,

Yeah, but the RSS feeds is the where er. Lots of podcasts only have ivoox, apple podcasts or spotify, and getri g their RSS, specially for older episodes, is absolute shit

aulin,

I would think podcasts without RSS is a tiny minority, and I wouldn’t take them seriously. And I’ve never even heard of ivoox.

aulin,

Consuming podcadts through Spotify is a wild concept.

fne8w2ah,

Podcast Addict and Podcast Republic ftw!

AVincentInSpace, (edited )

not so fun fact: both of these apps actually just search iTunes

this whole article feels misleading to me. platforms where you can search for things by name without specifying who published it, cannot exist unless one (or a small handful) of organizations does all of the publishing. not unless search engines communicate with each other – and since apple is one of the major players I can promise you they do not.

let’s face it. 99% of podcasters use a monthly paid service that hosts their media files and submits them to the small handful of podcast search engines that exist, maybe even gives them a boost in the algorithm or whatever, and which could delete them at any moment should the podcaster stop paying. the only people who want to think about technology less than creators are consumers. approximately 0% of podcast listeners even know what an RSS feed is. if you don’t like Apple (or worse, they don’t like you), and people have to find the setting to paste a URL into their podcast app to listen to your podcast, an even smaller percentage of no one will listen to it than otherwise would have. “find us wherever you get your podcasts” is just a fancy way of saying “get to our website by googling our company name” (which more and more companies are doing in their ads). if you become someone Google doesn’t want to appear in their results, or you’re not big enough for google to notice you exist, your dream is over before it starts.

I’m honestly baffled how anyone can talk about the world of public podcasts being open and radical when they’re like one industry cooperation away from supporting DRM.

also antennapod ftw.

ikidd,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

I have no idea where I get my podcasts; I hit Add Podcast in AntennaPod, it goes somewhere and I get a podcast subscription somehow. Can’t explain that.

dangblingus, (edited )

I always thought it was a jab at Spotify being all-powerful. Anytime you hear a commercial for a podcast, they always mention Apple Podcasts first, then maybe Stitcher gets a name-drop, but they NEVER say to listen to the podcast on spotify.

negativeyoda,

They’re not really mentioning stitcher any more

dangblingus,

You can tell how frequently I listen to podcasts lol used to a lot but I guess I’ve scaled back a little in the last year

veeesix,
@veeesix@lemmy.ca avatar

Stitcher actually got shut down last August after the SiriusXM acquisition.

victorz,

Could someone explain to me (I’m a developer so use whatever terms you like, maybe), how does the massive amount of podcasts reach the world? Say if I wanted to make a podcast app (I don’t, I love Pocket Casts), where would I sync the massive list’o’casts? Does it work like that? Or do you scrape the entire internet? What is happening?

yogurt,

iTunes api, and if apple turns evil there are other list-o-cast apis like fyyd.de.

TrickDacy,

if apple turns evil

Lolol yeah like that could EVER happen! /s

Skelectus,
@Skelectus@suppo.fi avatar

Maybe if Apple realizes they have this running somewhere behind their mountain of money.

yogurt,

Compared to Reddit or Twitter anyway, they haven’t killed their API yet so apps like pocket casts are mainly using iTunes for search

victorz,

Ah-ha. Interesting. Thanks!

TrickDacy,

Are you sure about this? I was under the impression there were several aggregators out there who all sort of shared data, iTunes just being one of them. Maybe you are totally right, but if you are that sort of undermines the original post, which is saying that the podcast ecosystem doesn’t depend on any one company/org.

wheeldawg,

Apple has been evil since day 1. When have they done any single thing that wasn’t evil? The EO is family a terrible, wireless person. I’m so confused what you mean.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

iTunes api, and if apple turns evil there are other list-o-cast apis like fyyd.de.

Whoever downvoted this has no clue. The Apple Podcast directory is currently unrestricted for any podcatcher to crawl and to get the RSS feeds. That may change at some point but for now it’s actually the best maintained RSS feed directory. The aforementioned fyyd.de is a good but less complete alternative. It relies of community submissions. fyyd.de itself is not an open source service, though.

s0ckpuppet,

It's done via RSS feeds that the podcast creators then submit to aggregators. Then apps pull that information down from said aggregators. This website explains the gist of it.

https://rss.com/blog/how-to-create-an-rss-feed-for-a-podcast/

soviettaters,

That’s how paid podcasts like Hardcore History are done.

victorz,

So how do the aggregators sync with each other to get all the podcasts? Or is it up to the podcast to “post” to all the aggregators?

QuarterSwede,
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

The aggregators don’t sync with each other. The podcast creators upload the new show to each aggregator (or use an app that uploads to multiple).

victorz,

Okay cool, that I think explains everything I’ve wondered about this topic lol. Awesome, thank you!

NightAuthor,

And they don’t even have to go through an aggregator, it’s just for ease of use and discovery, pretty much every app will let you put in an rss feed url, so podcast could be self hosted only reliant on having an internet connection… well, hell…. Only reliant on having a shared network connection with your target audience

capital, (edited )

The one paid podcast I pay for does this.

You pay on their site and then you get a personal RSS URL to put in your catcher.

density,
density avatar

rss

victorz,

🤡

ipkpjersi,

The protocol used for it is a bit of an older protocol, but basically it uses the RSS protocol. It came out in the 90s and hasn’t been updated since 2014, and I haven’t touched any code related to it since before 2019. Otherwise, it’d just be standard HTTPS for websites like Spotify etc and whatever podcast discovery system they have on their site etc.

victorz,

Does the protocol have its own name?

mindbleach,

When I found out that my Mastodon account was hosted by a company that was kind of shady, I was able to move it over to a Mastodon account run by Medium

… how shady was the first place?

NaibofTabr,

…exactly the kind of technology that’s supposed to be impossible: open, empowering tech that’s not owned by any one company, that can’t be controlled by any one company…

Who is suggesting that such technology is impossible? The internet is literally exactly this, based on an open standard (Internet Protocol) which is not controlled by any proprietary group.

IP wasn’t the first computer networking standard to be developed, but its open nature made it accessible to any interested manufacturers and that made it the most successful standard.

Anyone suggesting that this “kind of technology” is “supposed to be impossible” is either ignorant or stupid, or both.

TORFdot0,

If IP was developed today, you’d be paying IBM or a similar corp royalties for every network adapter manufactured. Thats whats supposed to be impossible in today’s late-stage hyper-capitalism web.

NaibofTabr,

IBM tried that in the 60s, 70s and 80s with their business mainframe systems, along with HP and several other manufacturers. Before IP gained prominence every major manufacturer had its own proprietary connection system they tried to sell, and the competition in the market was just as fierce then as it is now.

It didn’t work, the open model made all of the proprietary network systems obsolete.

mindbleach,

Tremendous progress has emerged from frustrated engineers muttering “fuck this.”

CosmicTurtle,

I think what the author meant was that it’s impossible in the capitalist marketplace.

Joe Rogan is probably a good anti-example. His podcast (as I understand it anyway) is only available on Spotify. But Conan O’Brien, the Office Ladies, and even The West Wing Weekly (which hasn’t been producing in years) is still available, for free, on any podcast platform.

NaibofTabr, (edited )

I think what the author meant was that it’s impossible in the capitalist marketplace.

Nonsense, the marketplace was also capitalist when the internet protocol was developed in 1974. It wasn’t that long ago.

Also, I’ll point out that open source software is very successful today and there are a lot of businesses based around open systems. Linux is the most widely used OS, particularly for embedded devices. Apache is the most widely used web server. You’re using an open source platform right now. You probably interact with open source systems every day, you’re surrounded by them, and they were developed in and thrive in the ‘capitalist marketplace’.

Thorny_Insight,

JRE apparently no longer is Spotify exclusive either

TrickDacy,

Who is suggesting that such technology is impossible?

Every business that could stand to make a buck from it being that way. But the author obviously meant in the current economic model we live under.

NaibofTabr,

the current economic model we live under.

The internet isn’t exactly ancient technology. Do you think the ‘current economic model’ is significantly different from the 1970s? (and can you back up that conclusion?)

TrickDacy,

I don’t follow what you’re saying. The economic model we’re in has been around for hundreds, arguably thousands of years in most ways. What about it?

The author was assuming people would know that “impossible” doesn’t always need to be literal. Things are more often impossible because of established norms. That’s all.

The norms we are discussing here is that under capitalism, the norm tends to be trending away from free and open systems. Because where there is a buck to be made, there’s usually someone doing everything they can to make that buck and prevent the openness that would render them useless.

NaibofTabr,

The economic model we’re in has been around for hundreds, arguably thousands of years in most ways. What about it?

And open source came into being inside of that model, and has grown and thrived since. So obviously, it’s not impossible.

The norms we are discussing here is that under capitalism, the norm tends to be trending away from free and open systems.

Right, this isn’t true. While certainly there are some businesses that try to restrict it, open systems grow and spread anyway. Open source is bigger and stronger than ever today. Open source software is so widespread that it’s a security concern for governments (look at the log4j fiasco). You interact with open platforms every day, even if you don’t see their names in commercials or on billboards (many of them don’t have to advertise).

TrickDacy,

I think you’re just being argumentative honestly. I don’t disagree with anything you’ve said really, I just take issue with the intentional reading of “possible” as “technically possible”.

Yeah OSS and a lot of open systems are huge and great. They will continue to grow. But as we both know, business will continue to be intentionally shitty. Exhibit A: world’s first trillion dollar company, Apple, thrives mostly due to the proprietary ecosystem they’ve put in place. It’s a “winning” strategy, as much as I loathe it.

We’re not disagreeing on anything but wording here.

NaibofTabr,

OK, but I’m not arguing for the sake of argument. What I take issue with is the overly negative point of view that isn’t justified by the reality of the current technology market. It’s limited, depressive and ultimately self-destructive.

Perspective matters. Money isn’t the only measure of success. Internet infrastructure is basically Linux, nginx and Apache - seriously, apart from user endpoints it’s pretty much all open source - and the most common endpoint OS is Android so also open source. The idea that open systems aren’t as successful as proprietary ones doesn’t reflect reality, it’s a projection of a limited point of view onto reality (it only seems true if large portions of the current technology market are ignored).

TrickDacy,

I get where you are coming from now. Thanks for elaborating.

I can see where you’d get that it’s an overly negative point of view, but I’ll be damned if companies like Apple don’t give me so many reasons to think that way :(

tryptaminev,

The IP helped the Internet to establish. But once established we see trends to try to limit the very technology into propriety. Think of the Facebook internet access schemes that tried to make everything go through facebook. Think of the attempts to make priviledged and throttled websites based on what the ISP likes…

When Podcasts were new, the open standard was embraced, but now we see attempts to make them exclusive too. Just that they didn’t prevail yet.

NaibofTabr,

Think of the Facebook internet access schemes that tried to make everything go through facebook.

You’re right that they’ve tried to do this and it’s ugly. But they’ve only been able to do it in places where they didn’t have to compete with an existing service, so I would argue that it’s successful only in a vacuum.

There are a lot of very successful businesses based around open source software. Open models are perfectly functional in the present. Their potential for success isn’t some relic of past idealism.

AtmaJnana,

Unpopular opinion: The open core model is underutilized.

Carighan,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

I’m also not sure I can agree with that it’s “a radical statement”. It is… not? Unless I misunderstand what others mean with radical in this context, but linguistically it should the form free of pre- and suffixes and qualifiers, no?

So in this context, “wherever you get your podcasts” is… not very radical. That’d be not actually stating anything in regards to your podcasting platform, as it is in itself a qualifier for something else in that sentence, and hence removed.

It’s also not radical in the political sense of course, but I kinda figured that’s not what is being alluded to here anyways as it’d inherently not make any sense.

helenslunch,

Podcasts are a sort of last bastion of internet freedom. Anyone can publish anywhere and be visible on all platforms.

s0ckpuppet,

Email newsletters kinda are too. You use a service to send them, but the list itself remains yours and can be moved around. No algorithm bullshit in your way. They're making a comeback lately it seems.

machinin, (edited )

Did anyone listen to Adam Curry’s Daily Source Code podcast? I remember him being very excited about the possibility of escaping the gatekeepers of traditional media. If i remember correctly, he was a major and important proponent of the open nature of podcasts.

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

When people push listening on Spotify even though the podcast is available everywhere else I roll my eyes.

mwproductions,

Whenever I’m talking with someone about my podcast and they ask, “can I find it on Spotify?” a little part of me dies.

Like, yes it’s available on Spotify, because it’s available everywhere. But I strongly dislike what Spotify tried to do to podcasting, and there are much better apps out there.

dangblingus,

I use spotify daily like most people these days. I’m not married to it, but it is easy to use (most of the time) and has the best selection of everything (for the most part). What app is a better use of my time for music and podcasts?

infinitepcg,

I like using AntennaPod for podcasts and Spotify for music.

ManosTheHandsOfFate,
@ManosTheHandsOfFate@lemmy.world avatar

If you like feature rich apps then I recommend Podcast Addict.

margaritox,

Is it available for iOS? The native podcast app is unbelievably confusing.

russjr08,

I don’t personally use iOS, but some friends of mine have given good reviews about Podcast Republic - note that it has a one-time ads free unlock to it.

margaritox,

Thanks!

helenslunch,

I literally stopped listening to Rogan when he moved to Spotify even though I already had an account and used it, because their app was such garbage at the time.

It’s slightly less garbage now.

sab,
sab avatar

One of my main motivations for cancelling my Spotify subscription was their insistence on capitalising on podcasts. They have a perfectly fine business model with music, why do they need to ruin podcasts?

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

I didn’t cancel because I think the rest of the service is fantastic, but I haven’t touched the podcasts. Because of the politics.

s0ckpuppet,

Yeah the locking down podcasts for exclusivity to me is really fucking toxic and totally counter to what podcasts used to stand for. Really pissed me off when Gimlet went Spotify only and Reply All was no longer available elsewhere. Very anti consumer.

chloyster,

I agree that the Spotify exclusive podcasts suck. However I am 99% sure reply all never went Spotify exclusive. The show just kinda imploded after the test kitchen series. I was listening up till the very end on normal podcast apps.

TheBat,
@TheBat@lemmy.world avatar

I thought of starting Spotify subscription but they keep recommending songs by artists that I have blocked. Fix your shit, Spotify.

kugel7c,

Because they don’t have a perfectly fine business model. They get squeezed hard by both the oligarchs of music publishing UMG, Sony Warner who negotiate the price for the music. And from the other side by the tech giants google and apple who can cross service subsidize their own streaming.There exists essentially no space for them to make any profit in streaming music. So they have to go other places.

The only reason they’ll probably exist for the foreseeable future is because the rights holders are able to use Spotify to have more negotiating power against Google and apple.

Archer,

I left when they paid Joe Rogan money

Carighan,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

Well plenty creators push product X, Y or Z. Whether that product is in itself also the hoster of the media you’re listening to… I dunno. Just another ad to me, I don’t really care about the details any more at that point. Sadly no sponsorblock for podcasts yet, AFAIK.

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Hey, I get that. Honestly I do not even think they push Spotify because they’re paid to do it. The ones I’m listening to, that is. They do it because they like the service and that’s fine. It’s just sad to feel like an afterthought. The adverts I’m fine with. I can just skip them.

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