At Netflix, the stars are out.
Not movie stars, per se, but rather the streaming service's system for rating the programs they watched with one to five stars. Instead, users will soon be able to express their level of enjoyment with a thumbs up for favorable or a thumbs down for unfavorable.
"Five stars feels very yesterday now," Todd Yellin, Netflix's vice president of product innovation, told a group of journalists at the company's Los Gatos headquarters on Thursday. That system "really projects what you think you want to tell the world. But we want to move to a system where it's really clear, when members rate, that it's for them, and to keep on making the Netflix experience better and better."
The company had beta tested the Facebook-like system with hundreds of thousands of new users around the world last year, finding that more than 200 percent more ratings were logged with the thumb system than the star system.
They should make it fun. Use the 5 💩 rating system instead. Or perhaps a whole suite of symbols for a more fine-grained response. Any suggestions?
(Score: 2) by Marand on Sunday March 19 2017, @03:04PM (1 child)
broaden support for the offline downloading feature.
Broaden the selection of downloadable titles, too. It's especially puzzling that Netflix's own content isn't consistently downloadable; it's like they don't have faith in their own platform.
(Score: 2) by fishybell on Sunday March 19 2017, @03:20PM
I'm guessing it's the variety of licenses each different movie studio requires.