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Entertainment

Amazon Reportedly Planning a Free, Ad-supported Video Service for Fire TV Owners (theverge.com) 26

Amazon is making an even bigger play for the television advertising market with a planned launch of an ad-supported video service specifically for Fire TV device owners, according to a report today from The Information. From a report: The service, which could be called Free Dive, is said to be very close in concept to the Roku Channel, an ad-supported free video service for Roku streaming devices and smart TVs that's helped the device maker grow its platform business. These services tend to offer a random mix of older catalog content, but they're free to stream. The Information estimates Amazon has around 48 million customers who own a Fire TV device, either in the form of a HDMI stick, a more powerful and 4K-equipped HDMI dongle, and the new, Alexa-enabled Fire Cube.
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Amazon Reportedly Planning a Free, Ad-supported Video Service for Fire TV Owners

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  • This is perfect for people like me: I own a bunch of Fire TVs, I love Amazon and I love ads.
  • by The_Revelation ( 688580 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @08:37PM (#57214420) Homepage
    I'm sure there are some people that will subject themselves to advertisements willingly, but I think Amazon may be missing out on the consumer segment that uses their products. In my country the antenna was unplugged about 17 years ago. We own a television (multiple in fact - can't get rid of them) and yet we don't take advantage of the free television on offering and instead pay for streaming services that don't have advertisements. So, it makes me wonder who is buying Amazon Fire tv units for their television units in order to receive the benefit of accessing an advertising supported service typically available for free to television units without the requirement of owning an Amazon Fire tv unit in addition to a television unit. I guess as another example, last time I bought someone a Kindle Paperwhite, I didn't even consider buying them the slightly cheaper 'Ad' supported model because why would I pay good money for something so that a marketing company can lie to my friends? If Amazon sent out an Ad supported model of the Kindle Paperwhite 'for free', I am sure a lot of consumers would take them up on that offer, but when you ask people to essentially pay for a product that comes with Ads, your pushing a product with very little value.
    • Pay for the broadband, get content and advertising.

      It's literally cable but for the web.

    • FireTV is my Netflix receiver. I never cared to pay for Prime. If they have any good content with this free offer, I might watch some occasionally. Maybe there are a few more people like me among those 48mln Fire owners.
    • by dfm3 ( 830843 )
      The Fire stick already serves ads; it just advertises Amazon's own media content (both directly through interstitial trailers, and by mixing free and paid media together in the same listings). We have one because it was the cheapest way to get Netflix to our dumb TV, and because we already have Prime so we get access to the free content if we can find it. But if Amazon went to a true ad-supported model (showing third party ads) and their existing service went to crap, we'd find another way to consume conten
  • It will serve as a gateway drug to Amazon Prime. Much like how the ad supported free version of Spotify is a gateway drug to the paid subscription service.
    One has to ask though why there are Amazon stick's now when Prime has apps on all the popular smart TV OS's? Even TCL has the full proper Android TV now.
    • It will serve as a gateway drug to Amazon Prime. Much like how the ad supported free version of Spotify is a gateway drug to the paid subscription service.

      Amazon prime already has ads. It's a big reason why we're thinking about not renewing our membership.

      One has to ask though why there are Amazon stick's now when Prime has apps on all the popular smart TV OS's? Even TCL has the full proper Android TV now.

      Smart TVs are for stupid people. They don't get updates like Fire TV does. You can fault Amazon for all sorts of things, but one thing they do right is continue delivering updates. Even the original Fire TV stick is still getting them.

  • Amazon, congratulations, you just reinvented OTA-TV stations. Just that it's not OTA but through the network cable, but I am fairly sure people don't care.

    You might have noticed, though, that people can get that without Fire-TV. What they don't get (easily) without Fire-TV is ad-FREE video. In other words, you might want to rethink the general idea and ponder your target demographic.

    • by Hodr ( 219920 )

      You tell 'em boss.

      There's no way they spent any time analyzing what channels (apps?) were most often used in the millions of devices they already sold to determine that there is a significant market for add supported free TV. And they definitely shouldn't follow in the financially successful footsteps of the most popular device manufacturer in their industry (Roku).

      They should spend 100% of their time and budget marketing to people who buy Amazon Fires to root them and turn them into Kodi boxes/sticks.

  • How about also supporting their own Fire 7 and Fire 8 tablets?

  • Yeah, that won't last. Ads are obsolete. No one wants them, and only idiots tolerate them.

  • So you pay for the device, then you can watch shows, and it's supported by ads? Welcome to 1941!

    "Since inception in the US in 1941, television commercials have become one of the most effective, persuasive, and popular methods of selling products of many sorts, especially consumer goods."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    Somewhere, deep inside Amazon, there is an executive who got a big bonus for floating this innovative idea.

    Once, I wanted to get some info from a paper that I had left at my house. I knew tha

  • a Free, Ad-supported Video Service

    So ... it's TV.

    You know, like with rabbit ears, that I watched the Brady Bunch on.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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