Well, Tidal changed their terms & conditions and “ordered” Algoriddim to implement the new restrictions in the Djay app, which were released now as part of 5.0.
If you stay on 4.1.10 on the old iPad you can circumvent the restrictions, but you won’t get any new features and bug fixes.
The best way to “fix” this is probably to find another streaming provider, or stop using streaming altogether.
My Neural mix was working just fine this morning. Went back to use it a few hours later and now it says that “Neural mix can’t be used while streaming with tidal due to licensing agreement”. Anyone else having this issue? Are they switching to another streaming service again?
Hi @Jitsumix22 I’m merging this post with an existing one. Unfortunately, Tidal has recently made more changes and now longer allows songs from other stream services to be played along side it. Please refer to the official statement in the other discussion above.
It’s time to get rid of Tidal for Deezer & Amazon, way too many limitations. DJay prides itself on mixing between streaming services. Having Tidal limits that and you now have to update your site to exclude Tidal from that benefit.
It won’t be as long as many people think before we no longer (have to) have this discussion, because streaming has also become the standard in this area. This could well be music that you have bought yourself and is stored somewhere in the cloud. But the times in which significant amounts of data (have to) be stored locally on the devices used are coming to an end.
Sadly so. The paradox is I haven’t been using my owned classic tracks for years since the streaming services came up. Generating additional revenue for all involved.
As a hobbyist DJ, I wish the streaming services would figure out a DJ tier subscription.
The onus is on us to have the relevant music license to play in public, if needs be. So, they would rather put blocks in place to lose these extra streams for the artists, than enable us to play their music via these apps.
With Spotify seemingly the go-to music streaming service, I’ve always been curious about how many streams they lost from the DJ population when they ceased supporting all DJ apps.
@MarkyPancake It’s nothing to do with “the times”. Streaming services typically are for personal use only - not for commercial use. That’s why they’re excluded from the license.
Spotify for example has a separate, more expensive service designed for business use.
Formally, this is certainly correct, but Tidal in particular advertises this feature quite prominently. If it ever comes to legal proceedings (which I don’t think it will), I’m very curious to see the verdict.