Frequently asked questions

Straight answers. No fluff.

We buy your Spotify listening history — the list of songs, artists, albums, and timestamps from your streaming activity. This is the data Spotify gives you when you request a download through their privacy settings. We don't buy (or want) your password, payment details, or any account credentials.
Go to your Spotify privacy settings and click "Request data." Spotify will email you a download link within a few days (usually 3–5). The file arrives as a ZIP containing JSON files. That's what you'll upload to us when our platform launches.
You'll receive a one-off payment for your full listening history, plus a smaller monthly amount if you opt in to ongoing data sharing. We're finalising exact pricing before launch — join the waitlist on the home page to get early access and be the first to know the rates.
Yes. Under GDPR (EU) and CCPA (California), your personal data belongs to you, and you have the legal right to access, export, and share it however you choose. Spotify provides the export tool specifically because they're required to. Selling data you've lawfully obtained about yourself is your right.
We aggregate and anonymise it, then sell the combined dataset to market researchers, music labels, and companies building recommendation algorithms. They use it to understand listening trends, plan marketing campaigns, and improve music discovery. Your individual listening history is never resold in identifiable form.
No. The one-off payment for your full history is completely standalone. Monthly sharing is optional — you can start and stop whenever you want. No subscription, no commitment, no penalty for stopping.
Soon. We're building it now and gauging interest first. Join the waitlist on the home page and you'll get an email as soon as uploads open, along with early-access pricing.