Artists Like SZA

Privacy

Privacy (Plain English)

No account is required. If features save preferences, they store to your browser’s local storage—not on our servers.

Advertising & Cookies

If ads are displayed, Google and partners may use cookies or identifiers to personalize ads and measure performance. Manage preferences via Google Ads Settings and learn more at Google’s Privacy & Terms.

Your Choices

Privacy

This site is lightweight and does not require an account. Any preferences you save would stay in your browser unless you export them.

Advertising & Cookies

If ads are displayed, Google and partners may use cookies or identifiers to personalize ads and measure performance. Manage preferences via Google Ads Settings and learn more at Google’s Privacy & Terms.

How We Think About Music Discovery & Respect

Beyond technical privacy, we also try to respect how fans actually use discovery sites like this one.

If you ever feel like something on this site crosses a line—technically or creatively—you can always reach out via the Contact page.

Listening Data, Algorithms, and You

Every streaming platform has its own recommendation system. This site is meant to layer human curation on top of that, not replace it.

However you choose to listen, you stay in control of what you save, what you skip, and what becomes part of your personal canon.

Examples of Low-Key, Privacy-Friendly Use

You don't have to treat this site like a social account. It's okay if it's just a quiet tab you open when you&aposre curating.

The point is discovery, not data collection. You stay in control of how visible your taste and playlists are.

Your comfort level matters

Choosing How Public Your Taste Needs to Be

Some fans love sharing every playlist. Others prefer keeping their most personal songs completely private.

However you use the recommendations here, your emotional comfort is more important than having the most “impressive” public profile.

Discovery in shared spaces

Listening in Public Without Oversharing

Headphones in a café or on campus can feel private, but your queue still shapes how others experience you and your space.

Privacy isn't just about accounts and data—it's also about choosing who gets to hear which parts of your soundtrack.

Your listening headspace

Checking In With How Music Affects You

Emotional safety is a part of privacy, too. The music you choose changes how your day feels from the inside.

The goal is not just finding good music, but finding music that treats you well.

Tiny digital hygiene

Cleaning Up After Deep Listening Sessions

After a long night of searching and skipping, a quick reset can keep your apps and headspace feeling lighter.

Small cleanups keep your discovery tools focused on the version of you that exists right now—not last year's taste.

Gentle boundaries

Choosing Who Gets Access to Your Playlists

Your most personal mixes don't have to be shareable links. You're allowed to keep parts of your taste just for you.

Discovery should feel like an act of self-connection first, and a social activity second.