Spotify's move into video is eroding the foundational portability of podcasting. Host James Cridland warns on Podnews Weekly Review that enabling video through third-party hosts like Podigee triggers a "permanent" API handoff that creators cannot reverse, despite multiple warnings during setup.
"Once active, the connection cannot be undone. Traditional RSS allows creators to migrate between hosts by redirecting a feed, but this new model creates a technical cul-de-sac."
- James Cridland, Podnews Weekly Review
This transforms hosts from interchangeable utilities into permanent gatekeepers. If service degrades or ownership changes, creators face abandoning their Spotify presence entirely.
Apple Podcasts is opening to video via HLS, but it's abandoning the permissionless model of audio. Cridland reveals Apple now imposes a manual approval process requiring proprietary API keys and .pem file uploads, which can take two weeks and functions as a content filter.
The economics are also shifting under the weight of video. Buzzsprout’s Alvin Brooke explains audio storage is negligible, but 1080p video demands new pricing. Buzzsprout adds a $10 monthly premium, while others cap plays or limit resolution.
Brooke frames this as a transition to "multi-format" listings bundling audio, video, and transcripts, prioritizing "delivery platforms" like Apple over algorithmic risks of YouTube. The result is a two-tiered system: open audio and gated video, with creators paying more for less autonomy.
