r/technology Feb 03 '23

Netflix says strict new password sharing rules were posted in error Business

https://appleinsider.com/articles/23/02/03/netflix-says-strict-new-password-sharing-rules-were-posted-in-error
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u/ikantolol Feb 03 '23

TL;DR

Now, however, those rules have been removed from Netflix's help pages. According to The Streamable, Netflix says it was all a mistake — for the United States.

"For a brief time yesterday, a help center article containing information that is only applicable to Chile, Costa Rica, and Peru, went live in other countries," a Netflix spokesperson told the publication. "We have since updated it."

probably just testing the water

hope that water boils and burn their feet

118

u/DonNotDonald Feb 03 '23

Wizards of the Coast. Netflix. Which big corporation will release a "draft" next?

112

u/antonspohn Feb 03 '23

HBO. They're desperate to ruin their image & run the company into the ground. The merger between Discovery & HBO was a craven cash grab.

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u/dratseb Feb 03 '23

It’s different because Discovery is killing HBO on purpose. Netflix is doing this because they’re incompetent.

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u/lanekimrygalski Feb 03 '23

Deciding to kill a premium brand associated with high quality content like HBO, in favor of the Discovery brand, seems pretty incompetent to me

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u/dratseb Feb 03 '23

It’d be like a winery converting to a beer factory to save money while expecting people that like wine to continue buying from them. Discovery and HBO are fundamentally different services catering to different people. Wine connoisseurs aren’t going to suddenly decide they like beer.

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u/CoolPractice Feb 03 '23

It’s not incompetence it’s hubris. Discovery is the CEO’s baby. He bought WB just to prop up Discovery.

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u/ABenevolentDespot Feb 04 '23

The high quality content HBO is a money loser, has been for a long time. The WB is currently not much better.

The very inexpensive to make trashy reality shows that are Discovery's bread and butter are a goldmine.

It's about the money, honey. No incompetence there.

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u/draftcrunk Feb 04 '23

Sad but probably true. Just rampant and disgusting unbridled and unchecked greed.

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u/SymbioteSpawn Feb 04 '23

Sure, but it's very short-sighted. People still want to watch The Wire and Sopranos over a decade later, I don't think anyone is going to be binging through 90 Day Fiance (or whatever, I have no idea if they make that show) in the same relative length of time.

I get that Zaslov will be gone and will have walked out with short term success, but anyone who is holding onto the company long should see this is a terrible plan.

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u/ABenevolentDespot Feb 04 '23

Products like The Sopranos and The Wire will likely be around for a long time because they are HBO financed projects that they have access to forever royalty free (although the actors and some above the line personnel do get ongoing residuals).

The stuff they're removing is stuff they have to pay ongoing fees to retain because it's someone else's product, and their metrics tell them not enough people are watching to continue paying the product owner to leave it on HBO.

Zaslov was the exact wrong person to be involved with and given control over Warner Brothers and HBO. Even worse than AT&T, who were a complete fucking disaster. Everything AT&T touches turns to shit.

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u/YouCanLookItUp Feb 04 '23

Until you realize it's an ideological posture, not a business one.

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u/grubas Feb 03 '23

That's all Zaslav, he's got this literally nonsense plan that he can cut operating costs make every DC movie a superhit, and do 10x the business of Disney.

Right now the plan is at "get all the businesses turning a profit".

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u/antonspohn Feb 04 '23

That doesn't seem to reflect reality considering the Batgirl cancelation & write-off.

Probably just claiming things to pacify shareholders while he plunders the company.

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u/Wahots Feb 04 '23

Disney owns HBO now? When did that happen? Jesus, at this point, what cinema/news/sports industry doesn't disney own, aside from alt right news and Apple's stuff?

Pray to God that they get hit by European antitrust and get forcefully broken up or we're all gonna be paying $70/mo for shit service soon.

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u/dablackviking Feb 04 '23 edited Feb 04 '23

To be fair, AT&t fucked them over on this. They unloaded $60bn in debt on the company during the spin-off. This mean they have to start paying off that loan soon.

This is causing the new CEO to make some cost cutting decisions. With a $60bn debt celling about to fall on you and only $2.5bn in cash, and only one of your films did well last year what can you do? I don't agree with what the CEO is doing and hate that he is destroying my childhood but AT&T but them between a rock in a hard place.

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u/Advent_Hades Feb 03 '23

Microsoft seems like a good contender