Rogers No Longer Gives 2 Years Of Free Spotify

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Stream unlimited music from your favorite services.

Ready for music freedom? With Simple Choice Plans you can stream unlimited music from your favorite services like Pandora, Spotify, iHeartRadio and more. Check it out today at T-Mobile.com.

With Music Freedom®, you can stream all the music you want while on our network—data charges do not apply. And it’s all included with your Simple Choice™ Plan.

Limited-time offer; subject to change. Music Streaming: Qualifying plan required. Licensed music streaming from included services does not count toward high-speed data allotment on T-Mobile's network or in Canada/Mexico; music streamed using mobile hotspot (tethering) service might. Song downloads, video content, and non-music audio content excluded. For included services, see list above. Capable device and qualifying service required for LTE. LTE is a trademark of ETSI. Coverage not available in some areas. Network Management: Service may be slowed, suspended, terminated, or restricted for misuse, abnormal use, interference with our network or ability to provide quality service to other users, or significant roaming.

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Rogers No Longer Gives 2 Years Of Free Spotify Music Converter

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Rogers No Longer Gives 2 Years Of Free Spotify Subscription

  1. Meet Mike Rogers. An outcome of two minds from different worlds overlapping in the territory of songwriting and producing. Mike Mago and Rogerseventytwo have worked intensively on this new project and are proud to share it now.
  2. Rogers says its all good on their end. When I look at my rogers account i have 2 years of Spotify premium, but when i go to spotify on iphone or desktop it says my premum expires in a few days. I have logged out and in several times. I have used the spotify contact form but have not heard back yet. I would really like to resolve this.
  3. Microsoft rebranded Xbox Music to Groove Music two years ago, in a bid to make its music streaming service more relevant to consumers. Despite the name change, Groove always felt like a vestige of.

Contrary to what many people believe, there is no absolute word limit on fair use. For example, copying 200 words from a work of 300 words wouldn't be fair use. However, copying 2,000 words from a work of 500,000 words might be fair. It all depends on the circumstances. I have the free version of spotify and my trial has expired. I upgraded my rogers account and got a 2 year free premium spotify. The problem is my account on spotify isnt showing premium its still showing the trial version. Ive tried loggin in and out a few times, deleting and re-installing spotify and still no luck.

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Stream all the video you want with Binge On®.

Stream unlimited video on your favorite services like Netflix, Amazon Video, Hulu, and many more without using a drop of your high-speed data.

Detectable video typically streams at DVD quality (480p+) with Binge On unless video provider opts out; on opt-out, high-speed data consumption will continue as if Binge On was disabled. On all T-Mobile plans, during congestion, the small fraction of customers using >50GB/mo. may notice reduced speeds until next bill cycle due to data prioritization. For best performance, leave any video streaming applications at their default automatic resolution setting. You may disable Binge On at any time, but will lose Binge On benefits. Sling not available in Puerto Rico.

Spotify’s Oct. 29 third-quarter earnings call was full of good news. The service now reaches 320 million monthly users with 144 million paid subscribers (up from 299 million and 138 million in the previous quarter, respectively), and its advertising business “returned to growth” after a pandemic-related decline. “There’s a significant pent-up demand for Spotify around the world,” said co-founder/CEO Daniel Ek, “even in places where our service has yet to launch.”

The rest of the month wasn’t so sunny. Two days earlier, podcaster Joe Rogan had right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones on his Spotify-exclusive podcast; Jones ranted about how Bill Gates was trafficking in vaccines that spread polio (which he’s not), angering Spotify staffers who had already spoken out about previous Rogan episodes that they considered transphobic.

It’s a rare public relations problem for a company that consumers tend to love — and it raises questions about whether Spotify considers itself to be more of a platform for creators (like YouTube) or a distributor that exercises some editorial control. The company’s $100 million multiyear deal with Rogan suggests the latter, as does Ek’s comment about the matter on the earnings call: “We obviously review all the content that goes up.” (Spotify did not comment for this story.)

These questions come at a time when Spotify is facing increased criticism from musicians who can’t tour about the service’s low per-stream payouts — roughly $0.0038 to the label, and just a fraction of that to artists, according to the new Union of Musicians, which recently launched a campaign called Justice at Spotify — and publishers and songwriters with whom it is in a federal court dispute over royalties. They’re not limited to the United States, either: A British Parliament committee plans to hold hearings as early as December about how streaming services pay. “We need to examine how appropriate the economic model is,” says Kevin Brennan, a member of Parliament who serves on the Select Committee for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. “My starting point is, it can’t be fair if the people making the music are reporting getting such a small share of the proceeds.”

So far, Spotify has managed to shrug off most criticism from creators: The creators popularized the monthly subscription business model that revived the recorded-music business, and it’s one of the biggest sources of revenue for rights holders, paying out $1 billion per quarter this year. The pandemic has made these issues more urgent, however, and the Rogan controversy will present new challenges. Even platforms like YouTube and Facebook have struggled to balance free speech (and the need for an audience) with some degree of corporate responsibility, and Spotify could have a tougher time ahead. Two years ago, in response to the #MuteRKelly movement, the company said it would no longer add certain artists’ music to its playlists — then reversed the decision within a month. Now, the company could find itself in a no-win situation: Rogan’s fans have complained about Spotify not uploading past episodes with far-right guests Milo Yiannopoulos and Gavin McInnes.

This isn’t a music-business issue, but it will give industry critics ammunition. “It’s hypocritical for the employees at Spotify to be concerned about the content in podcasts but to be silent about the company’s efforts to devastate songwriting,” says David Israelite, president/CEO of the National Music Publishers’ Association. And as Google and Facebook have seen, PR headaches can add up to major migraines.

Rogers No Longer Gives 2 Years Of Free Spotify Playlists

In the long run, Spotify may have to get used to being seen as less of a startup and more as one of the “ultimate capitalist monsters,” like Google and Facebook, says Jim McDermott, a longtime major-label executive who is now a digital-marketing consultant for artists. “It’s about making a profit for their shareholders.”