How does the 'More Like This' part of the artist page work?
from florge@feddit.uk to jellyfin@lemmy.ml on 25 Jun 2024 16:11
https://feddit.uk/post/13815232

Where is this sourced from?

#jellyfin

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AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.world on 25 Jun 2024 18:26 next collapse

I’m interested in this too. I have unreleased music that I’ve made and it somehow generates reasonable similarities to other music in my library. It can’t be simply pulling the info from the net since the artist name I’m using isn’t out there anywhere. Some kind of spectral analysis maybe?

PlexSheep@infosec.pub on 25 Jun 2024 18:41 next collapse

I’ve seen artists from the same genre in these sections, but that might just be correlation. You could always just check the source code I guess.

warmaster@lemmy.world on 26 Jun 2024 00:46 next collapse

This is freaking cool

HumanPerson@sh.itjust.works on 26 Jun 2024 14:38 next collapse

I could be completely wrong, but I know they have a tagging system in place. The tags presumably come from metadata providers (they give basic information about the song, like who wrote it and when it was made, as well as pictures for album covers and such). After that they can pretty easily look for similarities, eg. two items both tagged funny. If you were concerned that they upload your listening history somewhere to come up with recommendations, they do not.

EmilyIsTrans@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 11 Jul 2024 08:22 collapse

Taking a quick look at the source code (of which I am not familiar so I could be barking up the wrong tree), it seems that Jellyfin gives you a list of candidates in the following order: similar to recently played, similar to liked, directed by recently played, actor from recently played, has liked director, has liked actor. Similarity is calculated by rating and production year, as well as shared number of connected people, genres, studios, and tags. For music, it also adds specific criteria for other albums the artist has worked on.