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Jewish music

Why Men's and Women's Music Are Separate Categories

The reasoning behind FilteredTube's separated music categories, and how the separation is enforced by review rather than by labels.

A halachic boundary deserves structural respect

Kol isha is a real halachic boundary observed across the Jewish world, and a music product that takes its audience seriously has to respect it structurally - not with a tag a customer must notice, but with categories that cannot bleed into each other. In FilteredTube, men's music and women's music are separate categories, each reviewed on its own terms.

The separation is enforced during review, before anything appears. A song whose vocals are mixed or ambiguous does not get a warning label; it simply does not enter either category. Doubt resolves to hidden, the same tiebreaker that governs everything else in the catalog.

Serving both audiences fully

Separation is also what lets each audience be served fully. Women's music is a real, rich category with real artists - not an afterthought behind a toggle. Because the categories are structural, a family can hand a device to any member knowing the boundary is the catalog's job, not the listener's vigilance.

Search works naturally within each category: an artist's name, a style, a mood, an occasion. Every result carries the same guarantee as the rest of the catalog - reviewed against the written standard before it reached your screen.

At a glance

Key takeaways

  • The kol isha boundary is structural, not a label.
  • Ambiguous vocals resolve to hidden, like every doubt in the catalog.
  • Separation lets both audiences be served fully and safely.