VPN Blockade Backlash Doesn't Hurt Us, Says Netflix (torrentfreak.com) 98
Ernesto Van der Sar, writing for TorrentFreak: Netflix CEO Reed Hastings says that the recent crackdown on VPN and proxy users hasn't hurt the company's results. The VPN blockade only affects a small but vocal minority, according to Hastings, and there are no signs that hordes of subscribers are abandoning ship. Earlier this year Netflix announced that it would increase its efforts to block customers who circumvent geo-blockades. As a result, it has become harder to use VPN services and proxies to access Netflix content from other countries, something various movie studios have repeatedly called for. When asked about the impact of the VPN changes on the results, Hastings brushed the issue aside as a minor detail that doesn't impact the bigger picture in any way. "It's a very small but quite vocal minority. So it's really inconsequential to us, as you could see in the Q1 results." Earlier this year, Hastings also admitted that a VPN-blocking policy might be impossible to enforce.
This bull (Score:2)
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Just because it's a US title doesn't mean the rights holder sold the US distribution rights to Netflix
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Re:This bull (Score:5, Insightful)
Then Netflix shouldn't put it on my list. Or rather they should dish out for the rights, they've continued to increase prices while dropping more than half their content.
You should just stop paying them.
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> You should just stop paying them.
Easy to say, hard to implement.
I don't know if you're aware of this fact, but English as a language leaves a lot of room for improvement, but it's hard to replace it with something better, because of costs of readapting and past (individual) investments. This is not entirely different from why people still use Windows, being it what it is.
The best response might be to explore new alternatives with a pool of movies made from all parts of the world, first in a indie way t
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Then Netflix shouldn't put it on my list. Or rather they should dish out for the rights, they've continued to increase prices while dropping more than half their content.
You should just stop paying them.
Do you know the only reason I haven't stopped paying Netflix A$12 per month... Because I can still access US content.
If that stopped, yeah I'd go back to Channel BT. Your move content "owners".
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Small and inconsequential (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's small and inconsequential, why bother blocking it at all?
Re:Small and inconsequential (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the rights holders demand it. It's the only way Netflix can guarantee they'll continue being allowed to show their content.
Re:Small and inconsequential (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the rights holders demand it.
And it seems it's inconsequential to them as well. And from that we can extrapolate and say that those users, that were willing to pay but now are probably going to get the content by illegal means, doesn't really matter. It's a win-win-win scenario!
Re:Small and inconsequential (Score:5, Insightful)
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You're saying "most people" when these people are already not "most people" they are already the minority. So why do you think what most people do can be applied to this minority?
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Most people won't bother to get the content by illegal means - they'll just watch something else from Netflix.
What that software called again, the one that lets you click on a title in the Netflix web UI and immediately torrent it so it starts playing?
Re: Small and inconsequential (Score:2)
Haha. If you pay for netflix you might just as well pay 5 bucks more to see all the content on netflix. Netflix only does lip service to rights holders. Per country the list of shows so much... it feels like paying the same as US for 5 percent of content.
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If they went to the effort of getting a VPN set up to circumvent geoblocking on Netflix, it's a near certainty that they will have the know-how to set up a BitTorrent client and use that same VPN to mask their copyright infringement.
They have already demonstrated that they don't care about international copyright law by circumventing it with the VPN, even though the Netflix account they are accessing has their real name and billing details on it! I doubt many of them would hesitate to hop over to kat.cr or
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which doesn't profit the right holder, too.
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And it seems it's inconsequential to them as well. And from that we can extrapolate and say that those users, that were willing to pay but now are probably going to get the content by illegal means, doesn't really matter. It's a win-win-win scenario!
It's the traditional TV networks that care. They're the ones saying "exclusive rights in Kerbeckistan" is no good if the ratings are poor because people see it on Netflix over VPN. Just like the cinema business refuse to show movies that air at the same time, they won't give people cheap watercooler talk. If you want to be "in" on recent movies and not hear spoilers, it's in theaters and only in theaters now.
Of course one alternative is to go all Netflix, but 76% [variety.com] still pay for traditional cable or satellite
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I think, in the long run, companies like Netflix and Amazon are going to end acquiring more and more new shows that broadcast monopolies will break down anyways. That will obviously take some time, but with cord cutting on the rise, I think at some point in the next five to ten years the tipping point will be reached. Amazon and Netflix will be aided by the incompetence of the broadcasters, either trying to turning streaming into just another version of the standard broadcast, or with really buggy streaming
Re:Small and inconsequential (Score:4, Funny)
Dear Hollywood:
We have twice the number of subscribers as Comcast. Now shut the fuck up.
Cordially,
Netflix
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Oh ok. I'll see if TPB has it instead.
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BECAUSE IT'S STEALING!!!!
Everything against the EULA is punishable by DEATH~!!!!
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Except it is not. i.e. Ran into this very issue over the Winter break:
While visiting my parents in Canada I couldn't stream Netflix which is bullshit. I live in the US, and NetFlix can tell I have an US account but apparently since "I'm on vacation" I'm not allowed.
Shenanigans indeed.
Re:Small and inconsequential (Score:4, Interesting)
it's small and inconsequential
I think they are deluding themselves. What I read is that their VPN region block has been utterly ineffective, except for a small and inconsequential group of people who don't know how to get around their VPN blockade.
I don't know a single person who was actually stopped by this, but there was a lot of chuckling when it went down.
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Don't use a third party VPN service. Deploy your own VM with OpenVPN (or just use the built-in L2/L3 facilities provided by OpenSSH), configure it (and a couple of DNS-related things) properly, and HAND. If anyone is truly interested, I might put together a small guide (and maybe a basic "doitnow.sh" script) for this. -PCP
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I'm aware. You may be making invalid assumptions regarding the means by which most of their blocks are implemented. -PCP
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I am going outside the US to get content from other countries. I'm also not running the VPN client on my devices, it's on the router.
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This is the geek being delusional. (Score:2)
I think they are deluding themselves. What I read is that their VPN region block has been utterly ineffective, except for a small and inconsequential group of people who don't know how to get around their VPN blockade.
That inconsequential group of people numbers somewhere around 46 million.
The VPN is a geek thing --- an added layer of complexity and expense which may or may not work around the block. Simplicity is what sells streaming media, instant access to a broad range of programming, though not necessarily access to every title in the 800 page catalog of Moves Unlimited.
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Dan Gilmor, who doesn't strike me as neophyte nor a fool.
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If it's small and inconsequential, why bother blocking it at all?
Its not significantly affecting their revenue. Which is not hard to believe. If they don't block then they face consequential content licensing issues.
If it wasn't my parents account I would unsub (Score:1)
just like I did from hulu and any other company who won't let me use vpn. I am sure they collect data and sell it to advertisers which is exactly why I use a vpn
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I don't know if you meant to say vps but I will assume you meant vpn.
VPN = built-in solution. VPS = cloud private server, you build your own VPN - easy with OpenVPN. You do have to pay for traffic though...
I killed my service (Score:4, Interesting)
for blocking Unotelly to access US from Canada. Back to torrents, pawn shops and my 800+ DVD collection. Personally we just watched nature and travel shows and pretty much watched them all by now but fuck em I'll take the $11 and buy weed with it.
Hmmm (Score:1)
I'm a Netflix subscriber who hasn't left yet. If this affects me, I will. I am absolutely fed up with RIAA/MPAA lobbyists and their effect on the entire ecosystem. I'm pretty sure that if large services like Netflix allow themselves to get locked down by these types, people will start migrating. Bottom line, my money should be good wherever I am, and I am not your digital property. This policy offends me.
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You are offended for the wrong reasons.
"Geoblocking," exists to confine your purchases to your area, in support of your area. Your area has its own content for sale.
That's precisely what's going on in Australia. The Aussie content providers are pissed that Aussies want American stuff instead of Aussie stuff. Think of the children.
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You are offended for the wrong reasons.
"Geoblocking," exists to confine your purchases to your area, in support of your area. Your area has its own content for sale.
That's precisely what's going on in Australia. The Aussie content providers are pissed that Aussies want American stuff instead of Aussie stuff. Think of the children.
A whole bunch of Canadian made content is not available on Canadian Netflix but is available on US Netflix.
Blocks legitimate users, too! (Score:1)
In Canada.... (Score:2)
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Geolocking shakedown (Score:4, Interesting)
Step 1: try to acquire content via one of my PAYG preferred streaming services legally
Step 2 : torrent (or wait for physical distribution and borrow the discs off someone else)
I don't mind paying for content and 90% of content I do consume is paid for. I don't even mind too much if rights holders try and charge me significantly more than what they charge other regions as long as it is accessible and the price points are reasonable. What fkn shits me is having to deal with and enrich elusive rights digital arbitragers although they provide little value add in the supply chain. Also tracking down an old film that is 20+ years old, finding it is digitally accessible elsewhere but not where I live. I feel no ethical qualms about opening torrent under those circumstances.
Music is rarely geolocked. Why is film/TV treated differently?
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I enjoy a lot of Japanese music, and the vast majority of it is geoblocked. I haven't really found any alternatives aside from going to Japan and buying a bunch of CDs.
Makes me sad...
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Have you tried using a VPN? Netflix is big enough that the MAFIAA bullied them into blocking VPN traffic, but would various Japanese sellers even bother?
Australia (Score:3)
Yes, Netflix stopped blocking US content from Australia via DNS spoofers; but the DNS services have already worked around the blockades.
Netflix gets to save face saying we implemented blocking plans (which they did).
Users still get to access other regions because of technical workarounds.
happy (Score:3)
Hardship of innocents (Score:4, Informative)
He's lying (Score:5, Interesting)
They're not blocking people who use VPN to bypass geo-blockades. They're blocking VPN users, full stop. Without regard to why they're using VPN.
I was rather irritated to find that I could no longer use my VPN to access US content from the US using a US VPN IP address. Guys, I'm right here in Sacramento, and dammit, I'm using VPN for security, not to bypass your pathetic little attempts to screw your customers.
As a result I ended up finding other ways to bypass their restrictions. Which is something I would never have done if they hadn't blocked me in the first place! Morons.
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Let it die already (Score:1)
The sooner they realize that it's not a good idea to segregate people on a geographical basis in a global market the better.
I'm not jumping ship, I never even got on, and I won't until all the content will be available globally. But I did cancel my spotify subscription when it refused to play the music I wanted.
They put all kinds of restrictions on subscribers, and they wonder why piracy is still a thing.
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Yeah, but how do we make the MPAA (or RIAA in your other example) die? It isn't Netflix causing this, and letting them die won't fix the problem.
I've heard this before (Score:2)
"Netflix doesn't hurt us" -My former cable provider