
Summary (TL;DR)
It's 2 AM. You put on your headphones, wanting to listen to that old song that accompanied you through countless nights. You open the streaming app, the song name is still in the playlist, but when you tap play, it's grayed out—"Song unavailable due to copyright request." In that moment, you suddenly realize: the music you thought you "owned" never belonged to you.
In the streaming era, we have infinite choices. For a small monthly fee, millions of songs are on standby. But when your carefully constructed playlist shatters overnight, when "lossless" quality always feels like it's missing something, when algorithmic recommendations become increasingly homogenized, you discover—we gained convenience, but lost true ownership.
In 2026, beneath the surface prosperity of streaming dominance, more and more people are quietly returning to local music. This isn't nostalgia; it's a sober choice.