I AM SENDING YOU A COUPON CODE FOR FREE ACCESS TO ACAST+ TO COVER YOUR LIBSYN SUBSCRIPTION ← Check your email inbox for your coupon code. I now have a solution to the problem of transferring your 6 or 12 month subscriptions from Libsyn to Acast+. Some of you have tried to get refunds from Libsyn and they told you to contact me, and then I told you to wait until I’d found a solution to this. You’ll also get an email from me (sent on 29 July 2022). With this message I am going to tell you some final, important information about moving your subscription from Libsyn to Acast+. Thus, they have no real bearing on your podcast’s success, but it’s also not harmful to use them.Īt East Coast Studio, we’ve helped hundreds of podcasters from Canada and around the world ensure their podcasts sound great.This is another announcement for listeners who have a subscription to LEP Premium on Libsyn. The importance of ID3 tags at this point has greatly diminished. You can use a software or ask your podcast editor for further details. Some hosts, such as Libsyn, offer an option to automatically populate the ID3, so you can do this with ease.īeyond that, it is possible to manually fill out these details if your hosting platform doesn’t support them, if you want to. In rare cases, a listener may see the ID3 metadata if they download the file directly, but most will never even know if it has been filled out. They have no impact on SEO or search results. The bottom line here is that ID3 tags don’t require a whole lot of thought. This type of tagging was an entirely different concept than ID3 tags, but nevertheless, the two are still confused to this day. As users became wise to this and started practices like “keyword stuffing,” search engines and algorithms also became smarter, and keyword tagging as we know it essentially became extinct. Yes, to make it even more confusing, once upon a time, you could assign tags to podcast episodes so directories like iTunes could categorize them by topic. ID3 tags are often conflated with the type of tagging that you would use on something like a blog post, or even a podcast post in the past. There are occasionally devices that read the ID3 tags, but they are becoming less and less common. Unless the listener is downloading the MP3 file directly to their computer, rather than using a podcast app, it’s likely that the ID3 tags will be irrelevant to most of your audience. That’s right, very few listeners will ever see the content of your actual ID3 tags because they’re rarely used anymore. The RSS feed generated for your podcast by the hosting platform also contains all this important data such as the podcast name, episode title, artwork, and for the most part, this is where most of today’s digital devices retrieve information. Why ID3 tags generally aren’t important todayĪs podcast technology evolved, so too has the use of ID3 tags. You can now probably understand why this may be relevant to your podcast. ID3 tags are simply metadata embedded within an MP3 audio file used to store or show information to the listener.įor example, if you play an MP3 file of a song in your vehicle and see the artist’s name + song title on the display, this is a result of the ID3 tags storing that text. Nevertheless, questions about ID3 tags still pop up quite often. Much of the information online about ID3 Tags is outdated, and from a time in the earlier days of podcasting where they were of greater importance. If you’ve done any research along your journey to becoming a podcaster, you’ve very likely encountered the term “ID3 Tags.”
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