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12.03.2021 - 21:48 / perezhilton.com
Look out, freeloaders: Netflix is cracking down on password sharing!
In a new series of tests, the streaming giant is rolling out a verification process to ensure users are actually logged into their own account and not using Mom and Dad’s for free shows (or the other way around. LOLz!). Womp, womp!
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The tech company is having a little fun with it, too. According to GammaWire, the verification process
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Todd Spangler NY Digital EditorNetflix’s new test to verify subscription credentials of users — and convert password freeloaders into paying customers — could help the global streamer grow its subscriber count, according to a Wall Street analyst.“We view any potential password crackdowns as tailwind and Netflix is in a strong position to continue price increases in 2021,” Bank of America Securities analyst Nat Schindler wrote in a research note Friday.To date, Netflix hasn’t taken any proactive
Netflix might have more than 200 million subscribers worldwide, but the actual number of people using the service is probably significantly higher. How is that possible? Well, password sharing is a real thing.
Netflix is trialling a new feature aimed at cracking down on password sharing.It comes after users reported seeing a screen saying: “If you don’t live with the owner of this account, you need your own account to keep watching.”Users can verify that they are allowed to access the account by a code, sent via text or email.The aim is to crack down on ineligible users, although a final decision has yet to be made as to whether the company will roll this out across its network.O no.
Netflix log in as the company launches an apparent crackdown on sharing passwords.Some users of the streaming giant have reported being met with a screen warning them to make sure they are using their own account.According to the Netflix terms of service, account details should "not be shared with individuals beyond your household."The message that some users have reported reads: "If you don't live with the owner of this account, you need your own account to keep watching."Viewers are said to be
Naman Ramachandran Netflix has acquired worldwide rights, with some exclusions, for “The Personal History of David Copperfield” star Dev Patel’s directorial debut “Monkey Man.” The streamer is thought to have paid around $30 million for the film.The rights agreement excludes Spain, Latin America, Iceland, Former Yugoslavia, Poland, Russia and Baltic States, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Pan-Asian PTV and China, where there are pre-existing deals.In the India-set film, Patel plays an unlikely hero who
direct to your inboxIt can be tempting to share a Netflix password between family members and friends, as the company has previously adopted a laid-back attitude to sharing.But this is about to change.As Netflix is testing a feature which may lead to a crackdown on users sharing their passwords.Some users reported being met with a screen reading: “If you don’t live with the owner of this account, you need your own account to keep watching.”Viewers are reportedly given the option to verify their
GammaWire, some users have encountered an inquiry when they log on asking for verification that they are the owner of the Netflix account.
Netflix is testing a way to limit password sharing, in what could signal a notable shift of the streaming giant’s posture toward users.
Todd Spangler NY Digital EditorNetflix may be finally getting serious about cracking down on password sharing.The streaming giant in the past week launched a new test that displays a warning to some users that says, “If you don’t live with the owner of this account, you need your own account to keep watching.” Per Netflix’s terms of service, a customer’s account for the streaming service “may not be shared with individuals beyond your household.”In the Netflix test, the prompt provides three
If you currently use someone else’s Netflix password, you’re not going to like this news.
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