When Spotify Was Scraped

Streaming promised convenience, but scraping proved it didn’t end piracy—it only reshaped it.

A hacktivist group calling itself Anna’s Archive recently claimed it scraped almost the entire Spotify catalog—around 86 million tracks, covering roughly 99% of all music streams on the platform. Not removed. Not deleted. Just copied, at massive scale.

They framed it as preservation. An archive. Almost like a Wikipedia offline dump—but for music.

And that comparison is tempting. Wikipedia openly allows full database dumps. Knowledge is meant to be shared, copied, preserved. No royalties. No artists losing income. No complicated middle ground. Music is different.

Every track has a creator behind it. A livelihood. Rights. Royalties—small as they already are. So while Wikipedia sharing feels clean, music sharing is messy. Someone always pays the price, and it’s usually the artist.

Still, the scrape exposed something uncomfortable.

Spotify is known for being one of the most paranoid platforms. Locked-down accounts. DRM. Aggressive bot detection. AI-driven defenses against fraud, fake streams, and abuse. And yet, it still happened. Which makes you wonder what was really being protected.

It feels like a platform busy securing war defenses—AI battles, data battles, behavior battles—while missing the obvious truth. If music is streamable, it is copyable. There is no firewall against sound.

It’s like a house with every door locked, even the CR, but the windows left open—because people still need air. Access is the window. Streaming is the window. And scraping simply climbed through it.

Streaming was supposed to solve piracy. No more downloading. No more hoarding MP3s. Just press play and move on. But instead of killing piracy, it only reshaped it. From individual downloads to automated harvesting. From one song to entire catalogs.

And this is where regret enters.

Because when everything is rented, nothing is yours. You don’t own the music. You don’t keep it. You don’t pass it on. You can’t ask an artist to sign your phone. You can’t hand down a playlist. You can’t keep a song when a platform changes its rules or disappears.

That’s why physical media is quietly coming back. Vinyl. Cassette. CD. Even simple MP3 files. Not because they’re trendy, but because ownership matters.

A record can be signed. A CD can age with you. An MP3 works offline, free from algorithms and policy shifts. Streaming promised convenience, but people want permanence.

In the end, Spotify didn’t solve piracy. It just closed one door and opened another—leading people back to physical media, digital files, and the human need to keep what they love.

Some things shouldn’t be rented forever. Some things deserve to stay.

Boycott Spotify.
Uninstall Spotify.
Support Bandcamp artists.
Install Bandcamp.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Digital Albums by Darem Placer on Bandcamp
Listen. Buy. Download.

When the Sea Gets Smarter Than Spotify

When technology races toward war faster than art, it shows what the world truly values—and what it quietly forgets.

Blue Ocean isn’t just a poetic name—it’s an Australian company that builds autonomous underwater vehicles, unmanned submarines that can explore, patrol, and collect data from the deep. They design ocean drones that serve both science and defense, but lately, their path leans more toward surveillance and security. Helsing, a European defense tech firm, just bought it. Their goal? Smarter oceans, stronger borders, AI-driven war tools.

Now here’s the part that stings: Helsing’s chairman is Daniel Ek, the same guy who built Spotify.

Funny how progress moves faster when it’s about weapons. Helsing builds factories, funds research, and launches prototypes. Spotify? Still underpaying artists, glitching playlists, and serving ads louder than music.

Daniel Ek invests more in drones than in musicians. That’s the irony—war tech evolves faster than art tech.

If you ever wonder where innovation goes, follow the money. It dives deep—not into creativity, but into conflict.

Let music breathe where conscience still lives. Boycott Spotify. Uninstall Spotify. Don’t ignore the lie.

Boycott Spotify

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ