This is a topic that is super-interesting to me. I absolutely hate that Spotify refers to "Your Library" instead of "My library" or just "Library".
My POV on this is that it is a case of ownership. The albums I save on Spotify are mine as long as I keep using Spotify. Another offender of this is Amazon. It's MY account, and they are MY orders. They also use "your" repetitively to the point that it makes no sense.
I think your suggestion that it is more clear to use both "your" and "my" in the same application is misguided. When's the last time a user thought that hard or learned a product that deeply?
My recommendation is for the product to cede ownership to the user. In cases like where that makes no sense, they should use no ownership label.
This is a topic that is super-interesting to me. I absolutely hate that Spotify refers to "Your Library" instead of "My library" or just "Library".
My POV on this is that it is a case of ownership. The albums I save on Spotify are mine as long as I keep using Spotify. Another offender of this is Amazon. It's MY account, and they are MY orders. They also use "your" repetitively to the point that it makes no sense.
I think your suggestion that it is more clear to use both "your" and "my" in the same application is misguided. When's the last time a user thought that hard or learned a product that deeply?
My recommendation is for the product to cede ownership to the user. In cases like where that makes no sense, they should use no ownership label.