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Disney Plus' Restrictions on Password Sharing Are Now Rolling Out To US Subscribers (theverge.com) 54

Disney Plus has started to inform subscribers about new changes to its terms of service that will, among other things, make it harder for people to access the service using log-in credentials that aren't actually theirs. From a report:The updated terms come a few months after Disney Plus implemented similar measures for its Canadian subscribers and just days after Hulu sent out similar notices to users about changes to its own TOS and its plans to stop password sharing in the coming weeks. Like Hulu's terms of service, the changes to Disney Plus' agreement are dated January 25th and are already in effect for new customers. Per Disney Plus' emails, existing subscribers can expect the new restrictions to go into effect on March 14th.
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Disney Plus' Restrictions on Password Sharing Are Now Rolling Out To US Subscribers

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  • Iâ(TM)m tired of my cheap realities and in-laws asking for my password every time their pathetic smart tv logs them out. Get a real streaming device and get your own streaming subscription. Too expensive? Donâ(TM)t like their rates? Then donâ(TM)t pay it 12 months out of the year and shuffle around every few months. This idea you have to pay Netflix Hulu peacock paramount Disney hbo crackle whatever all at the same time is where I realize people are not that bright with finances.
    • Iâ(TM)m tired of my cheap realities and in-laws asking for my password every time their pathetic smart tv logs them out. Get a real streaming device and get your own streaming subscription. Too expensive? Donâ(TM)t like their rates? Then donâ(TM)t pay it 12 months out of the year and shuffle around every few months. This idea you have to pay Netflix Hulu peacock paramount Disney hbo crackle whatever all at the same time is where I realize people are not that bright with finances.

      I wonder what it would cost to have something like Comcast cable and have all the streaming services?

      Anyhow, the streamers allowed password sharing in the same manner that the first hit from the drug dealer is free. Now they hope people are hooked.

      Can't say that I care about Disney+ though. Maybe if they get a new batch of writers and start creating good content. I don't know where they got the current batch, but the stories just aren't very good.

      • by dbialac ( 320955 )
        In my own situation, years ago Netflix got rid of the two shows I watched consistently, which made it easy to move on to something else.
        • I cancelled Netflix when I realized they removed "When we left Earth: The NASA Missions". I found out they constantly remove content, rather than just add to a massive library a-la Spotify or Apple Music.

          I cancelled Disney Plus when it went woke. I just downloaded all the classics I really wanted, along with the Star Wars stuff I like. I subsequently cancelled all of my streaming services, and I only have Prime now, since that I really use for faster free shipping for my Amazon account. I wont pay to rem
          • by dbialac ( 320955 )
            I'm the same with Prime, but I did buy a lot of Top Gear via Prime so it's comericial free for me. I had a number of the movies I like on DVD, but former roommates decided they wanted them too and stole them. PCU is high on the list of movies I want back. I'm guessing that George Clinton is a big reason you can't get it anymore nor on any platform. Personally, I don't have a lot that I download, minus the Top Gear Vietnam Special with the correct soundtrack. Whoever didn't distribute that outside the US nee
    • Not really the use case of most people I know.

      Almost everyone I know shares one service out and gets multiple services back as a result. So you might share D+, and get back Prime, Netflix, and HBO.

      In my case, I share my current streaming channel with a girlfriend and over 90% of my consumption is at her house ( Honestly, I think it is probably over 98% as I've only watched 16 hours of content over the last 60 days at home. ) And frankly, we don't watch much at her house as we use other free services for

    • â(TM)

      What causes this issue anyway?

      • It's a combination of two things. One is iOS keyboard producing smart quote characters that fall outside Basic Latin (ASCII). The other is Slashdot's deliberate lack of proper support for Unicode in comments due to past abuses by vandals. One was the "erocS" problem: abuse of control characters to reverse text, making other posts difficult to read and spoofing moderation scores. The other was use of non-ASCII code units to draw glyph art that circumvents Slashdot's filters against obscene or racist ASCII ar

  • Market Saturation (Score:5, Interesting)

    by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Wednesday February 07, 2024 @09:58AM (#64222008) Homepage

    They are coming to their peak, much like Netflix. It's the only way to up the revenue. They are realizing that without forced bundling with cable, their overall viewership is probably going to be permanently lower.

    Cable was always a negotiating scheme doomed to price bloat. At least Netflix and Disney are maintaining the core service and trying to keep the list price relatively even now. Amazon is putting ads in their $140/yr. streaming service. Me, I just use the shipping and not the streaming but others are nearly all streaming and rarely shipping.

    Whatever happens, there needs to always be ad-free options or the whole process starts over.

    • by dbialac ( 320955 )
      For under $50/year, many of these services remain ad-free. In the case of Amazon, that initial $140/year gets you, among other things, expedited delivery, access to their radio streaming -- ad free, and TV streaming. The fact that you choose not to use them is on you, not them.
      • Is a price burden on me, you mean. I've been used to fund their TV production costs when I only want shipping.

        I know neither Disney or Netflix are anywhere near as low as $50/yr. Who is still charging $4/mo?

        • by dbialac ( 320955 )
          To clarify, for an additional fee, typically under $50/year, many of these services remain ad-free.
    • Disney Plus has now gathered a large enough audience that its subscribers are now trapped in and cannot easily choose another service. So it starts taking away every value it has for its subscribers, leaving just enough that they won't quit en masse.

      After almost everything has been taken away, people leave screamingly, and the platform dies.

      See also: Enshittification [wikipedia.org] on Wikipedia.

      • by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Wednesday February 07, 2024 @10:38AM (#64222136) Homepage

        Yes - that would be repeating the cable TV process all over again. Except nobody is trapped on Disney Plus. I am a current subscriber but I can easily turn that switch off. I can buy a digital or physical copy of the 1-2 shows on constant repeat and then nothing is lost. Netflix meanwhile will not sell any perpetual viewing rights to a show in any format except for a couple of fancy box sets for a couple of Stranger Things seasons.

        The ruining of services is because of publicly traded companies' crazed seeking of perpetually increasing revenue. Most individuals would be happy with a good salary with cost of living adjustments, but publicly traded companies only care about getting raises every year or investors will quit. This isn't how publicly traded companies used to act, but it is a reality that ruins more than just TV services.

        Most shows aren't even worth a re-watch, so streaming is just becoming a TV rental service for me. When I am done with one service, I rewind and return and subscribe to another.

      • Disney Plus has now gathered a large enough audience

        I cancelled two months ago and there have no big complaints. The kids haven't even noticed as they are too busy playing video games. Disney is trying to cash in by raising prices and slowing the creation of new content, so I'm cashing out. Netflix has much more content, especially for kids, although it does cost about 75% more for a similar level of ad-free service.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 07, 2024 @10:07AM (#64222032)

    Meanwhile, pirating is STILL FREE.

    It's becoming more mainstream as these streaming services keep making themselves harder to use and more annoying.

    Sure, some of us never stopped, but for the rest of you, welcome back!

    • Agree and in sometimes that actually works on in a streaming services favor.

      I actually have signed up for AppleTV because I had "acquired" a couple of their shows and right now as a fan of science fiction I had enjoyed enough of their series that I actually want them to continue producing them. For All Mankind, Severance, Silo, and Foundation are all covering different scifi genres and I appreciate them for that.

      • As long as you've got the service, so it wouldn't cost any extra, give "Ted Lasso" a shot. It's not sci-fi (which is my usual thing, too), but it IS really good, and it also ends (for now, there are rumors) very well. I was surprised how much I enjoyed it because it's "a sports show" but it really isn't - they barely touch on actual futbol footage.

    • by WankerWeasel ( 875277 ) on Wednesday February 07, 2024 @10:53AM (#64222170)

      Netflix showed massive influx of new subscribers when they cracked down. Clearly doing so is financially beneficial to the streaming service.

      Only a very small percentage of folks will bother pirating and know how to do so. Oh no, people that already weren't paying for the content are still not paying for the content but instead using their own bandwidth and not being a drain on the streaming provider resources! And it makes it more work to get the content, as you mentioned. Pirating isn't the flex you think it is.

    • by Vrallis ( 33290 )

      Yep, my family is saving so much money now cancelling all these services. The shit content was already driving us away, but not getting the number of streams/screens you pay for was the final blow.

  • can save your family thousands a year. It applies to everything. Most people barely use their high speed Internet. A family of 5 will barely saturate their upload speed, so routing the streaming services through one home will not generally affect the services.

    In reality most would rather pay for separate accounts than bother with the family interaction and/or the time to learn a bit about a subject. It interferes with their time on social media.

  • by drblunt ( 606487 ) on Wednesday February 07, 2024 @11:39AM (#64222268)
    This is all well and good, but since I'm a traveling musician who isn't home for months at a time, the local network registration for my devices expires and I'm left without access to content that I pay for and have every right to access according to not only the EULAs but also to the customer service people I've 'spoken' with. They offer condolences, but no recourse to solve the issue for a paying customer, simply because my issue is niche, and they don't give a sh*t.
    • Yes. So stop paying them and forget about it. They do not offer you a service you can use.
      • My wife is still at home, using the content, my doge.

        That's why I would like to be able to access it, because we pay for it, and the companies say I can.

        But I can't. And then I get real genius level responses like this, solving a problem they refuse to understand.

        • You are right.

          If one is technically competent, you can set up a VPN to your home network to appear like you are still at home.

          However this is far above the capabilities of most people.

          A supposedly portable service has now been locked down geographically.

    • by Voyager529 ( 1363959 ) <voyager529@yahoo. c o m> on Wednesday February 07, 2024 @03:01PM (#64222806)

      but no recourse to solve the issue for a paying customer,

      this is Slashdot, so:

      0.) I'm assuming you're not using an LTE service or something else that uses CGNAT.
      1.) Get a dynamic dns address from no-ip or duckdns.
      get an old desktop / refurb desktop / raspberry Pi.
      2.) Install DietPi (https://dietpi.com/). During the install, add Docker-CE, Docker-Compose, and Portainer, and give it a static IP.
      3.) Upon completion of the install, type 'dietpi-ddns' and configure your dynamic dns address.
      4.) Use this to setup Portainer (https://www.howtogeek.com/devops/how-to-get-started-with-portainer-a-web-ui-for-docker/).
      5.) Use this to set up wg-easy (https://github.com/wg-easy/wg-easy). You can either do the CLI-only method, or the parameters listed there within Portainer. Make sure to change the "WG_HOST" variable to your dynamic DNS address, and "PASSWORD" to something useful.
      6.) Port Forward 51820 and 51821 TCP/UDP to your DietPi server.
      7.) On your phone/laptop, Install the Wireguard client (https://www.wireguard.com/install/).
      8.) log into http://yourdynamicip.com:58121... [yourdynamicip.com] (yes, it's regular http) using the password you made in step 5. Create a new profile for your particular device.
      9.) Download the .conf file and import it into Wireguard on your device.
      10.) Un-forward 51821, leaving only 51820 forwarded.

      Congratulations, in about 3 hours (if you're not really experienced) or 15 minutes (if you dream in docker-compose), you've got a full tunnel VPN that will ensure ANY device you have a config file on will route all its traffic through your home when you're away, avoiding this entire problem.

      Is it crap that it's necessary? Yes. But it works.

  • so far it's trivial to get around, but I'll be cancelling it if it's not.

    Initially they only went after heavy users with the assumption that they'd sign up for separate accounts (which they did). I barely use it but between my house and my kid's there's been just enough to keep it around. If they start pushing into the lighter users they'll start to see cancellations.
    • I already did. After being their customer over a decade (and paying ever increasing monthly fees as the content quality constantly dropped (not always their fault as other rights holders started their own tiny streaming channels)), I cancelled months ago. When I do re-subscribe, it will probably be for 30 days. I'll watch the 16 hours of content they've built up that I'm actually interested in during that month and then cancel again.

      • Way too much hassle. Just pirate the stuff its easier you can watch it when you like and its better quality
        • I can afford it, so I feel an ethical obligation to pay for it. And I'm rational so I also feel a self interest in paying for it ( creation of new content ).

          If you are too poor to afford it, I have no problem with someone pirating it.

          However, watching it while swigging your $4.50 iced latte' doesn't qualify as "too poor".

    • Yeah, my Netflix stopped working a couple weeks ago. I share with a few others, and pay extra to do so, so I'm not sure what the issue is. Haven't wanted to spend the time to dig into it. Been watching Prime instead...which now has ads.

      Getting very tired of this BS. I have tons of games I haven't played, books to read. Guess they don't want my money.
  • They, and other streamers, are risking losing a generation of future consumers - college students - who are likely to get bumped off the service as a result of this. Is it a smart long term business plan by Disney to piss off an entire generation of future parents, who will then remember how they were treated and continue to think ill of their vast array of products going forward? By sticking to some boneheaded 18th century concept of a "household" as one physical building, they're barreling in this direc

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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