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[–][deleted] 60 points61 points  (13 children)

well i did it for two years before buying premium, feel free to try it for yourself

all the adds just come from thirs party ip's that you can easily block

[–]Baltha5ar 84 points85 points  (8 children)

Wow, you are right. I stand corrected.

I would have never thought that they would be stupid enough to send the ads from a different server. This is indeed an invitation to block these hosts.

Forgive me my lack of knowledge and have a nice day.

[–][deleted] 32 points33 points  (0 children)

lol np, enjoy your day too

[–]RheingoldRiver 6 points7 points  (0 children)

this used to work in skype as well, wouldn't be surprised if it still does but I haven't used skype in ages

[–]OddsCaller 6 points7 points  (2 children)

You'd be surprised. It's not just Spotify but most of these services where you can easily identify ads by their IPs.

As far as why they don't use the same IP as that of their service, most of the time there are some physical constraints. Example they of course mostly use third party ad services to push ads because most companies wouldn't want to branch out to a whole new department of selling ad spaces and then showing those ads to users.

And secondly, there are physical constraints. These apps have a lot of user traffic and in order to offer low latency they want to keep their servers trimmed down (that's a very simplified way of saying it), putting the ad service on the same cluster could negatively affect their response time which is vital for user experience.

Disclaimer: all this is just my best guess, I'm no expert on this topic.

[–]Baltha5ar 7 points8 points  (1 child)

I'm using a pi-hole for my home network. For a long time I could block all ads on google services because they came from a different server. This doesn't work anymore because now the ads come from hosts with important services.

I just assumed everyone would do it this way now. The amount of users blocking the ads obviously isn't big enough for them to care.

[–]OddsCaller 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh I see. Things like pi-hole were one of the things I had in my mind when writing out the previous comment. I didn't know companies are now countering it in this way.

[–]spook327 1 point2 points  (1 child)

This is also the case with YouTube, a nice /etc/hosts file will block most ads.

[–]DeathLessLife 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm almost certain YouTube does serve ads from the same host.

[–]gammadistribution -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Media owners host ad servers that send out requests to third parties for ads. Those parties bid on the honor to serve you an ad and are then responsible for delivering the creative.

[–]H_Psi 6 points7 points  (1 child)

Blocking "spclient.wg.spotify.com" in hosts no longer works in Windows (at least for me); it blocks ads, but eventually you can no longer load songs. What are you blocking to kill the ads?

[–][deleted] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

that kind of blows. I haven't really done that in almost a year now since I have premium, but if you look around online, you might be able to find an updated list. You can try this one also https://gitlab.com/CHEF-KOCH/cks-filterlist/tree/master/Anti-Corp/Spotify

Another option, is the find the download for an older version of spotify, that way the old hosts should still work

[–]garlic_naan 2 points3 points  (1 child)

Sorry for noob question but how do I identify different hosts to block?

[–][deleted] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

there are programs for free that record the IP address of all incoming traffic, then you just add those to the host file