The streaming giant said it added 9.3 million subscribers in the first three months of the year.
Netflix says its profits have soared in the first three months of this year, partly thanks to a crackdown on password sharing.
The streaming giant said it added 9.3 million customers in the first quarter, bringing its total number of subscribers to almost 270 million.
The company also said its profits in the first quarter jumped to more than $2.3bn (£1.85bn).
But the firm will stop reporting key subscriber numbers from next year.
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Some investors saw its unexpected decision to stop reporting subscriber numbers as a sign that Netflix's wave of customer growth may be coming to an end.
Simon Gallagher, a former Netflix director and now principal of entertainment investment firm SPG Global, told the BBC's Today programme that while the numbers indicated a "very, very strong performance" this might not last.
I heard investors need stocks to forever go up and for that to happen companies need to keep doing things like this. They cant just leave things as they are or something
Not only investors. Everyone needs stocks to forever go up. We're kind of fucked, because once it becomes apparent that the infinite market growth isn't possible and we reach a theoretical ceiling of stock market, the world and economy will probably be in serious shit.
I've tried looking for some articles or papers about what would actually happen and couldn't find any, but our society right now is kind of based on that premise, and once it stops it's going to be a problem. Mostly for the ordinary people, though. And of course, caused entirely by the greedy investors struggling to figure out how to keep milking the cow. Fuck capitalism.
That's exactly right. In fact, they legally have to do what they think will be good for the investors/ stock holders.
It's one of the reasons why Valve has managed to be a loved company for decades. It's a private company, so they don't have to answer for monetarily poor decisions and are free to do what they'd like. It also means things could change if management changes hands.
One day the companies will figure out how to charge infinite money for no product or service. Then capitalism will be satisfied and the game will be won.
I cancelled all my streaming accounts because of this. I never shared the password other than with my SO. It was a wake up call to the whole subscriptions scam. It's a shitty middleman.
Subscriptions add up real quick: movies, music, games, apps, cloud, news, etc. Let alone having some other hobbies.
I have friends who drop $200 per month on those things. Absolutely insane. That's a month worth of avocado toast.
My ex has hundreds of dollars of subscription stuff each month: Disney, Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Streaming, Max/HBO, OnlyFans, Tinder, Field, Bumble etc etc. It's so stupid
There was a time when Netflix had some really weird indie shit and I loved that. Last I used it they basically produced their own butchered versions of other material, like the Witcher. I unsubscribed after the first season.
I'd pay slightly more than their current rate if they could get me much higher bitrate streaming. I can't pay more for the same, though, and I fear that's the tack they will take.
We have failed. We need to be better consumers, and do something about when businesses pull tricks like this. But we have failed to appropriately respond, and we will be paying a big price for this.
Now, every single subscription business and their mother will be cracking down on password sharing. It'll be seen as guaranteed profit at the expense of our wallets and freedoms, and quickly ingrained into society.
Do what though? We can either unsubscribe, or subscribe. This is not a social service by them, nor is a gun being put to our heads to use Netflix. I really don't mean to defend them, I prefer the high seas myself, but I genuinely feel there's nothing we can or should do except either agree or disagree with them about subscribing to their plans.
My response to being told Netflix would stop my password sharing was to cancel my sub. And now, months later, I'm using someone else's password to keep watching their shows...
This is where the problem lies: We have pathetically little power over the situation. I try to do my best to avoid paying companies that abuse their paying customers and let others know about it.
I'm sorry, but you're wrong. We didn't fail. Netflix popularized a business model that most businesses would've cracked down on from the jump (password sharing) and then, once they controlled a sizable market of unique and desired IP, they did a rug pull. Blaming that on consumers is asinine. Everyone knew that the original practice was outside the norm and legally grey. And now your options are breaking the law or finally getting the subscription you probably would've been paying the whole time.
It's part of enshittification. By offering more to a consumer than they're used to from the jump, it builds a positive relationship, and then you undo the practice later to squeeze profit. Shaming the victims in the situation is a weird thing that a lot of people like to do.
True, businesses try to seize all the opportunity for themselves, which is why I think we should do the same. It's why I left Reddit for Lemmy, I didn't want to keep supporting a platform that wasn't respecting me.
Or the third option which is to cancel Netflix even short term. I wasn't password sharing, but when Netflix cracked down, we cancelled. We use the other services. I'm voting with my dollars.
LOL I was in arguments with a number of angry internet people who were vehemently screaming how this would be the death of Netflix. They seriously thought that all the people who were getting free passwords would simply not subscribe to Netflix. To which I responded, then they wouldn't lose a single subscriber. And then I saw more than a few people actually say that subscribers who were sharing their passwords would stop subscribing to Netflix because they weren't able to share their passwords. Just an example of how your personal feelings about something can skew your observance of a reality.
Now, why people are choosing to subscribe to Netflix at all is something I genuinely don't understand. I'll pay for a month of it every 12-18 months and get bored searching for something to watch within a couple days.
I'm interested to see how the younger TikTok generation transitions to commercial programming. I would think some portion of the demographic isn't going to want to sit own for 30-90 minutes to watch wide-screen television. Just as we transition from over-the-air to cable to streaming, I wonder what will come next. "TikFlix"?
I used to subscribe inconsistently when there was something I wanted to watch. Then I started sharing with my family so I kept the subscription up at a higher price constantly because I didn't know when they were using it or not. I've since gone back to only subscribing at a lower price when I want to watch something. I honestly thought way more people would be in this situation.
We're actually there. Go on YouTube and you'll see entire movies condensed into tokable sized chunks. This is how Z watches movies now, and it will only get worse.
Songs are becoming shorter and shorter, to hopefully create a tiktok trend.
Most modern movies are pointless fluff anyway. I don't need to watch 20minutes of fighting and explosions, I really don't. Or even more stereotypical, boring one liners, jokes, and banter. Not to mention the movies with the exact same emotional motivations - the superhero movies. Miss me with the war propaganda and reactionary bullshit. And that's what most movies are about these days. Internet is killing Hollywood because Hollywood has always been fluff and not that good.
But the firm will stop reporting key subscriber numbers from next year.
They're going to pretend user attrition isn't happening as new subs burn out on content and the old "family" accounts recalculate the value of their subscriptions and start dropping or juggling netflix.
Their sign up for password sharing is extremely aggressive too. Once you login to your TV it forces you to see the plan information without any option to say no or skip, regardless if you've shared your account before. You then have to select the other non default option to opt out. IF you accidentally hit ok after frustratingly trying to leave the prompt you get auto billed for the new fee zero confirmation of CC or purchase information. You then immediately have to enter the cell number of who you want to share with without letting you leave or go back. They want that person's info regardless if you plan to share or not.
I use my account at two households without much issue. I wish they were a little more lenient, but it’s better than Hulu’s implementation. I canceled Hulu TV because of it.