This algorithm also essentially aims to suggest content that we may not know but that we might like, and it does this by analyzing and profiling each user who uses the platform. But what happens if other users use the same personal profile? In this case, the profiling is “dirty” with the musical tastes of other users.
And this always happens when your children use the main Spotify account to listen to the content they like. And then we end up with the playlists automatically generated by Spotify of artists very popular with the youngest. Musical content that might not interest an adult at all. Spotify’s new feature should solve this problem. The managed account will allow your minor children to initialize an account, which is essentially a “child” of the main account. In this way, on the one hand, it will be possible to restrict or limit the content accessible to minors, possibly by placing blocks on content marked as not suitable for minors. On the other hand, it will be possible not to pollute your profiling with the musical tastes of the little ones. This will also be reflected in the usual Wrapped (here’s how to see your Wrapped ) that Spotify offers to each of its users at the end of the year. Minors with managed accounts will receive their Wrapped, as will the parents or guardians who manage the minor’s account. The new feature we just described is not available to all subscribers. Spotify has indicated that it is a feature that is being tested for those who subscribe to the Family plan in Denmark, New Zealand and Sweden, for which there is the option to create and initialize a managed account for children under 13.
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