Spotify rolls out toggles to disable app videos

Spotify has introduced settings allowing users on free and paid plans to turn off videos, including Canvas looping visuals, music videos, and podcasts. The update, rolling out globally this month, also lets family plan managers adjust video settings for all members. Users can now choose an audio-first experience across mobile, desktop, TV, and web platforms.

Spotify announced the new video controls on Thursday, enabling listeners to opt out of unwanted visuals. The toggles cover Canvas—short looping videos on the Now Playing screen—music videos, video podcasts, vertically scrolling videos, and artist clips. These settings apply universally to Premium, Basic, and free accounts, with the family plan manager option starting immediately for all members, expanding from previous limits to those under 13 on managed accounts only. Spotify stated the controls allow users 'to maintain an audio-first experience or layer in a richer, video-enhanced one.' The company noted that disabling videos will still show video ads and Canvas-like visuals on some audio ads. The features appear under Settings > Content and display. Spotify has gradually added video elements over the years, starting with Canvas in 2018, followed by video podcasts in 2020, music videos in 2024—reaching the US late last year—and artist clips. Over 70 percent of users reportedly favor more video content, though the toggles address preferences for audio-only listening.

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Smartphone screen showing Spotify's new AI-powered prompted podcast playlists feature, with a custom user prompt and generated playlist.
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Spotify launches AI-powered prompted playlists for podcasts

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Spotify has rolled out an AI feature that generates personalized podcast playlists based on user prompts. The update, available now to premium subscribers in select countries, builds on a similar tool previously introduced for music. It aims to help listeners discover new shows and revisit older episodes.

Spotify announced Tuesday it is now offering audio versions of long-form articles from major magazines. The feature launches with more than 650 pieces available to Premium users.

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YouTube has introduced a feature in its iOS and Android apps allowing users to disable Shorts completely or set viewing time limits. The Shorts Timer lets parents and users cap sessions at 15, 30, or 45 minutes, or one to two hours, with an option to set it to zero minutes. The tool is rolling out first to supervised accounts before reaching all users.

Nintendo Music is now accessible on more devices beyond its mobile app. The update allows Nintendo Switch Online subscribers to stream on PC browsers, tablets and car touchscreens.

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Spotify and Universal Music Group have signed a licensing agreement that will let Premium subscribers create AI covers and remixes of UMG tracks. The deal was announced on May 21 during Spotify’s Investor Day. It marks a shift after Spotify’s earlier efforts to limit AI-generated content on the platform.

YouTube has begun muting push notifications on mobile devices from subscribed channels that users have not engaged with for at least a month. The change applies to channels with notifications set to 'all' and aims to reduce clutter while keeping alerts available in the app. Infrequent uploaders remain unaffected.

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YouTube has increased prices for its Premium service in the United States for the first time since 2023. The individual plan now costs $15.99 a month, up $2, while the family plan rises $4 to $26.99. New subscribers face the hikes immediately, with existing users notified for changes on future billing cycles.

 

 

 

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