Taylor Swift’s latest studio album Reputation arrives this Friday, but the streaming industry still doesn’t know if they’ll have access to it.

Update: Bloomberg says Taylor Swift will not be streaming her new album at launch.

Original story: The New York Times has spoken to streaming executives and learned that none know if they’ll be streaming Reputation this Friday. “Four executives at major streaming services said they did not expect the album to be made available for streaming, at least at first,” they write. “But those executives, who spoke anonymously to protect private negotiations, said that plans could change at any time.”

Taylor Swift’s catalogue returned to Spotify earlier this year (on the same day her enemy’s album Witness was released). The decision made it look like Swift had come around on streaming — her last album, 1989, wasn’t available at launch.

The world continues to move to streaming, and in the past three years Apple Music has dramatically increased the number of people spending money on a full music library rather than individual albums. Still, Taylor Swift is one of the biggest artists in the world. Like Adele and Beyoncé, she can release her album however she wants, and her fans will follow.

Preventing the album from streaming will surely increase revenue, which is the biggest reason why an artist would avoid streaming for as long as they can.

So save $10 this weekend for Reputation. Look what you made us do, Taylor: Save up for a single album like it’s 1999.

The album arrives November 10.