Business Netflix’s password crackdown has started in the U.S. - Starting now, anyone borrowing a Netflix login in the U.S. will have to get their own account or pay $7.99 a month

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Netflix’s password crackdown has started in the U.S.
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Heather Kelly
2023-05-24 01:50:07GMT

After nearly a year of warnings and testing, Netflix has finally launched its password-sharing crackdown in the United States.

Anyone sharing their Netflix account login with family members or friends who don’t live at the same address will be asked to pay an extra $7.99 a month for each additional person. The company started sending out emails Tuesday to people it determined are breaking the rules, and will continue to roll them out to primary account holders in the coming days. The people borrowing the login will get an update when they try to log in that tells them how to start their own account.

People who are using an account on the go will need to login from the primarily address once every 31 days to avoid being flagged.

There will be no penalty for primary account members who are caught sharing their credentials. The company will just stop the people they are sharing with from being able to stream. People who want to start their own accounts have the option to transfer their profile so they can pick up on whichever episode of “Selling Sunset” they were watching last.

Only people who pay for the $15.49 a month “Standard” or $19.99 a month “Premium” plan will have the option to pay for additional users. If they have an ad-supported $6.99 a month or $9.99 a month “Basic” plan, they will not have the option unless they upgrade.
Netflix has said that 100 million people around the world use its subscription streaming service without paying for their own accounts. It started testing this crackdown on password sharing last year in other countries, but has long said it would eventually come to the U.S., where the company was founded in 1997.

Critics of the enforcement say it doesn’t take into account nontraditional families and jobs or limited income. If a child goes off to college for the first time and lives in a dorm, they’ll need to pay for an additional “extra member” profile. Same goes for anyone who is logging in primarily away from the main home address without regularly coming back, whether it’s because they work on the road, are deployed in the military or are a child living primarily with a parent who has custody, but not the Netflix account.

While the company policies have always said accounts were meant to be shared by households, it publicly embraced the practice in the past. In 2017, the official Netflix account tweeted “Love is sharing a password.” And at CES in 2016, Netflix chief executive Reed Hastings said the company “loved” that people share Netflix accounts and described it as “a positive thing, not a negative thing,” according to CNET.

Streaming companies have been tweaking their businesses over the past year as they struggle with increasing competition and the reality that people can only afford so many monthly subscription fees. Many have raised prices, including Prime Video, Netflix and Apple TV Plus, but no other company has gone after account sharing in the same way.

In April, Netflix also announced it is discontinuing its DVD subscription service, which mailed physical discs to customers — an offering that has existed since the company was founded.
 
Netflix has reached the "squeeze more revenue out of a dwindling customer base" stage of the corporate death spiral.

Most people I know went back to piracy years ago anyway. Torrent sites never send you e-mails about being in violation of their policies.
 
qbittorrent is free, just saying. Netflix lowered their bitrates on their 4k streaming (which costs extra) to below what is standard for a 1080p Blu-Ray. The highest their 4k goes is around 17mbs, a 4k Blu-Ray is 128mbps, a regular Blu-Ray is 40mbs. Paying for Netflix is retarded.
 
Everything on it can be easily streamed on pirate sites that seem to stay up forever somehow. I'll be really interested in how this will affect VPN users. I'll drop them in a heartbeat if I can't use it at 2 houses. They really should just have it so you pay per concurrent watching instead of address, just stupid.
 
Maybe they should have made shit people actually want to watch instead if cringy gay/troon propaganda that was always destined to fail because troons are mostly jobless losers without any money?
 
This part stuck out to me...

Streaming companies have been tweaking their businesses over the past year as they struggle with increasing competition and the reality that people can only afford so many monthly subscription fees. Many have raised prices

"We know you're fucked in a variety of ways..we're going to make it so you can only afford to be fucked potentially once."

No way a 4 person 'household' that splits due to the nature of life/growing up will commit to a 30$ a month bill for netflix. These companies are just forcing you to choose which will lead to people not choosing any of them and sticking to free content.
 
They made Cuties, still never paying for their shit. Experienced this new policy being shoved in people's faces due to family's subscription though. It's like they are trying to kill themselves.
 
People who are using an account on the go will need to login from the primarily address once every 31 days to avoid being flagged.

How does that work? What if you only have a phone that you use as a wifi hotspot? Do they track your phone's GPS coordinates to ensure you are in your house at least once a month?

What a lot of people do with these streaming sites is one person gets Netflix, one person gets Amazon Prime and one person gets HBOMAX. Then they all share passwords with each other so each is paying 1/3 of the cost in the end. Netflix is ruining that "ecosystem" with this move.
 
lmao whatever Netflix. I sail the Seven Seas for everything. ☠️ 🏝️ ⚓

These streaming services don't have anything worth watching anyway. Remake, reboot, propaganda -- more of that please. :roll:
 
Netflix has reached the "squeeze more revenue out of a dwindling customer base" stage of the corporate death spiral.

Most people I know went back to piracy years ago anyway. Torrent sites never send you e-mails about being in violation of their policies.
It is garbage like this that makes me proud to be a pirate. Less money for Netflix equals more money for plane tickets to Somalia.
 
Letting my whole family use it is the only reason I've kept up my subscription despite the price increases over the years. The very first time one of them is blocked from access, it'll be canceled same-day.
 
Netflix is lucky zoomszooms suck at computers. Millennials, for all our faults, grew up pirating (we have limewire memes). A friend asked me which piratebay website was the right one and I told him to make sure he gets a VPN because now they do send you messages when you forget to turn it on.
 
Smart people pirate everything. Most people in the entertainment industry are terrible people anyway, so none of them deserve money.
 
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