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posted by hubie on Saturday February 10 2024, @12:20PM   Printer-friendly
from the streaming-restrictions-are-coming-in-torrents dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:

So we’ve noted more than once that as the streaming sector is saturated and new user growth slows, streaming giants will follow on a fairly predictable path that got their predecessors (cable TV companies) in trouble. Namely, shifting away from innovation and disruption and consumer welfare, and toward nickel-and-diming customers in a bid to give Wall Street improved quarterly returns at any cost.

That means a lot of pointless and harmful “growth for growth sake” mergers (see: Discovery Time Warner), endless price hikes, weird attempts to nickel-and-dime users (see: Amazon suddenly charging extra to avoid new ads), a general skimping on staff pay and customer service, and a steady enshittification of overall product quality you’ve probably already noticed.

Part of that process involves eliminating popular things that previously helped bring in new customers, like password sharing. We’ve noted how when Netflix wanted to sign up more customers, it praised password sharing, acknowledging that it didn’t really hurt the company’s bottom line, and basically acted as free advertising. Besides, Netflix already charges users extra for additional simultaneous streams.

Now that global growth is slowing, Netflix has to effectively cannibalize its own product quality and brand to appease Wall Street. It’s not good enough to just have a high quality product that makes money and people like; the need for improved quarterly returns inevitably turns disruptors into turf protectors. It’s what kicked Comcast in the teeth, and streaming execs seem poised to ignore the lessons.

[...] But if there’s any potential to squeeze out a tiny bit of additional profits from existing customers, these executives will do it. Wall Street demands it. And when annoyed users increasingly head to free alternatives or piracy after being inundated with price hikes and sagging product quality, execs will inevitably blame everything and everyone but themselves for the failure. It’s how this all works.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by mcgrew on Saturday February 10 2024, @09:33PM (1 child)

    by mcgrew (701) <publish@mcgrewbooks.com> on Saturday February 10 2024, @09:33PM (#1343897) Homepage Journal

    Bullshit.

    I have Disney+. They emailed me about it. When my daughter in Cincinnati can no longer watch it, the geniuses at Disney will lose a customer. I'll miss Star Wars, but Fuck Disney.

    This is nothing but rampant greed. Sure, if there are thirty people in one city using the same password, there's freeloading, but organizations with brains allow a set number of devices per subscription. My daughter was paying for Netflix. Did Netflix starting this stupidity gain them a single penny? I suspect it's costing them, I don't willingly buy from people who piss me off, especially something I can easily do without.

    The number one problem in the world that causes almost all misery is the greed of the filthy rich.

    --
    Impeach Donald Saruman and his sidekick Elon Sauron
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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by tekk on Sunday February 11 2024, @05:34AM

    by tekk (5704) Subscriber Badge on Sunday February 11 2024, @05:34AM (#1343942)

    Rather importantly: these services had a way to handle these cases already. Your Netflix account came with a limited number of simultaneous streams. I think 2 for the base, up to 5 with the highest plan. They're literally removing features you already paid for.