Netflix Unveils First Details of New Anti-Password Sharing Measures - Update: Netflix claims rules were posted in error

Maxxam

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After months of warning subscribers that anti-password sharing measures were coming to Netflix, the company appears to be finally set to unleash them.

Netflix has estimated that over 100 million users worldwide are using the service through the login credentials of someone else. It hopes that by putting an end to account sharing, it will bring a new infusion of revenue to the company. It’s essentially the only way that Netflix can make meaningful subscriber additions in North America, where the service currently sees its highest share of market penetration.

The Netflix Help Center now has a page outlining how your account should be shared, and how it shouldn’t. Check below for all the details you’ll need regarding sharing a password on Netflix.

Who Can Use a Netflix Account Now?
Netflix accounts are still shareable, but only within one household. To ensure that your devices are associated with your primary location, Netflix is now asking users to connect to the Wi-Fi at your primary location, open the Netflix app or website, and watch something at least once every 31 days.

Can You Still Share Netflix With Someone Who Doesn’t Live With You?
No, accounts are only meant to be used within one household. Netflix will prompt users who try to sign into your account elsewhere to sign up for their own account instead and block their access until they do.

Netflix will NOT begin automatically charging account holders whose information is used outside of their homes.

Can Other Users on Your Netflix Account Save Their Profiles?
Yes, Netflix offers users a profile transfer feature that will allow them to migrate their show recommendations, watch history, and more to their own account if they decide to create one. This will give password sharers the opportunity to preserve their profile if they sign up for their own Netflix accounts.

Can You Still Use Netflix While Traveling?
Signing into Netflix outside of your home may lead to the device in use being blocked from Netflix. This could prevent you from signing into new devices while traveling, but Netflix has devised a workaround.

Traveling users who want to use Netflix on a hotel smart TV, company laptop, etc. can request a temporary code from the service when signing in. This will give them access to their account for seven consecutive days.

How Can You Prevent Netflix from Blocking Your Devices?
Signing into home Wi-Fi at least once every 31 days on your devices will make them “trusted devices,” which Netflix will remember and leave unblocked.

If your device has been blocked incorrectly, you’ll need to contact Netflix in order to get it unblocked.

How Will Netflix Know if You’re Not in Your Home/Primary Location?
Netflix uses information such as IP addresses, device IDs, and account activity to determine whether a device signed into your account is connected at your primary location.

If your device is being used outside your home by someone you haven’t authorized, you can sign into your account and sign out on all other devices, then change your password.

How Many Devices Will Netflix Let You Use Simultaneously in One Location?
That all depends on which plan you’re signed up for. Netflix offers four distinct price tiers, and the number of simultaneous streams varies on which tier you subscribe to.

Basic With Ads ($6.99 per Month) Basic ($9.99 per Month) Standard ($15.49 per Month) Premium ($19.99 per Month) 1 Device 1 Device 2 Devices 4 Devices
These measures seem like cautious first steps to avoid a massive exodus of account-sharing users. If they do not meet Netflix’s expectations in curbing password sharing, harsher measures, such as charging users who continue to give out their login information, could follow. Netflix began testing methods to charge users $3 when someone outside the home accessed their account in several Latin American countries in 2022.

When discussing Netflix’s plans to curb password sharing in mid-January, Netflix co-CEO Greg Peters said the company was seeking “thoughtful experimentation to let our members speak to us in terms of what set of solutions work for them.”

Now that the first details regarding that experimentation are public, all that remains to be seen is how users respond.

update:

 
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I see Netflix stuff on free streaming.com

To think about it..I see sports, hbo max, Disney, etc all on free streaming.com.. best deal on the net..haven’t paid in over a decade
 
Oh, I was thinking about actually logging into the smart tv keyboard on the tv where you have to use your password and username. :dunno:

It crossed my mind too and that would be annoying! I hated how other services would do that. These days, it seems like when you open a channel’s app (either the first time in the day or after the app was completely closed) it takes you to the user profile screen as if when it’s opened it logs you in automatically.
 
It crossed my mind too and that would be annoying! I hated how other services would do that. These days, it seems like when you open a channel’s app (either the first time in the day or after the app was completely closed) it takes you to the user profile screen as if when it’s opened it logs you in automatically.
Oh....cool, yeah, that seems more logical rather than using a username and a password every month.
 
Damn
I've been using my ex-wife Netflix for years. I got my best friends Hulu and my friend has my Disney Plus. You mean I'm actually gonna have to pay for Netflix now?

Damn
 
They had a very good run...the studios conspired to fuck them...last years losses, this stupid little plan (7 days is not long enough for the temporary travel code)...they are still strong but this feels like they are trending down
 
Tons of free sites to get everything on these streaming services , from movies, series, to sports.. been that way will always be that way

I tried the Fire Stick years ago and it was a big hassle updating and navigating the sites. Has it all gotten easier?
 
Ah well, American Netflix sucks compared to other countries.

I wouldn't mind dumping it especially after how they just handled Record of Ragnarok S2
 
Other services will probably follow suit. I know The Mouse is going to get ALL of his money
 
I would just torrent with a VPN, embrace the culture of the U.S. with just stealing and not paying. Backdoor into somebody computer without the permission...
 
Ill actually watch something from netflix. Every once in a while. It seems like their going overboard. With the password sharing thing. Why dont they just offer a family plan. With a higher price. Ill actually do that, than this password fuckery.
 
& people asked the same questions about Blockbuster. Now we're here.
Not the same thing, Blockbuster should have got into streaming but let Netflix eat their cake. NEtflix just blew out their earning with all the new subscribers since this new policy, so it is working.
 
We have a place about an hour away from our primary residence. We might not always go every month. I’ll cancel out of spite before I jump through hoops at the weekend home.
 
Not the same thing, Blockbuster should have got into streaming but let Netflix eat their cake. NEtflix just blew out their earning with all the new subscribers since this new policy, so it is working.
You don't get me, I'm playing off of the idea that people think that a product is only game in town; people thought Blockbuster was the only game in town and then came Red Box and after that there was streaming. Now many considered Netflix the only game in town until a few years ago, now their hold on being the leading streaming service has dwindled, because the other steaming competitors are hot on their heels.

peep it:

From Parrot’s measurements, demand share for Netflix’s originals has dropped from 45.2% in Q1 of 2022 to 41.2% in Q2 of 2022. The only time it’s fallen by a larger percentage was in Q4 of 2019 which is when Disney Plus and Apple TV Plus both launched. But now it’s happening without the launch of any new competitors. You can see the split between all the major services below:


MEIGZ9D_o.png


 
Damn I thought they'd go with the $3 add-on fee per "home" they were testing back in August... this approach goes too far. Sounds like more people who share will just downgrade their plan to fewer devices, or cancel entirely

And having to request temp codes when leaving your house works against the concept of having a mobile app :dunno:
 
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Oh there's free alternatives. Netflix would have to somehow get rid of the 123Movies type sites for me to even pretend I might pay for their streaming service at this point
First thing is you don’t inform them of the name of those free sites out loud.. they can shut them down when they know the names
 
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