Netflix is starting to raise prices in some countries as growth spurred by its crackdown on password sharing starts to fade.

The film and TV streaming giant said it had already lifted subscription fees in Japan and parts of Europe as well as the Middle East and Africa over the last month.

Changes in Italy and Spain are now being rolled-out.

In its latest results, Netflix announced that it had added 5.1 million subscribers between July and September - ahead of forecasts but the smallest gain in more than a year.

  • kenjen@sopuli.xyz
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    7 hours ago

    Netflix is good streaming Gets expensive and sharing increases Banish Sharing and can’t get more users Raises prices and won’t get new users.

    They would have been better off lowering the price by 10-20% after carrying out the ban to pick up many of the users they lost.

      • Megaman_EXE@beehaw.org
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        5 hours ago

        I feel like this has been the case for everything the past few years. Grocery prices seem to be following the same trend

        • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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          4 hours ago

          Companies will charge what the market will bear. If Netflix increases prices and lowers quality and people keep paying the higher price for lower quality, then Netflix will keep doing it. It’s up to consumers to not pay for enshittification in order to stop it.

  • beefbot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    I was celebrating the signup / binge / cancel pipeline, but now I’m realising: a next step they could use to prevent that would be putting caps on your watch time, like “you only get 20h of content a month” or something.

    Wouldn’t be a surprise to see this. I’m callin it now lol

  • shoulderoforion@fedia.io
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    3 days ago

    See, the problem with publicly traded corporations is, they’ve got to constantly not only be making as much money this year as they did the previous year, but they’ve got to increase shareholder value, which means, raising prices, or reducing the product to save costs, we have termed that last bit enshitification. I mean, they don’t HAVE to, but if they choose not to, the board of directors will push for a change in CSUITE personnel, and those fuckers are raking in the big bucks, and really really like their 3rd vacation homes in Aspen, so you pay more, or you get less, and sometimes you pay more AND you get less. And the beat goes on.

    • Sauerkraut@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 days ago

      Publically traded companies only exist because capitalists willed it so. Capitalism will always seek the path to greatest profits for the capitalist class with little to no regard for the consequences of that

    • NotAnArdvark@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      I don’t see what would be wrong with a world where businesses just satisfied themselves with providing employees with a reasonable living, contributed to the communities they were in, and provided a good or service that was needed. Sitting under a tree and reading a book sounds better than watching the world burn in your name-brand clothes and 5 bedroom 2.5 bath house.

        • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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          3 days ago

          In the real world, communism also suffered from the mandated growth problem, as well as a long list of other issues that some people still like to pretend solely exist under capitalism and some serious problems that are exclusive to this system. Yes, it is actually bad, with and without Cold War propaganda making it sound both worse and better than it actually was. It failed everywhere for a reason.

          This doesn’t mean that there aren’t real issues with capitalism as well. So far, the best system we’ve come up with as a species is heavily regulated capitalism with strong social safety nets. Not perfect, but nothing is on this rock.

          • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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            2 days ago

            So far, the best system we’ve come up with as a species is heavily regulated capitalism with strong social safety nets

            And for quite a lot of human history the best system we had come up with was Feudalism, until we started doing something better.

            Just because Capitalism is the best we’ve come up with so far doesn’t mean we should just accept it, or that 1000 years from now people won’t look at the Capitalism with the same disdain we look at Feudalism.

            • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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              There’s a reason I said “so far”. I’m open to the idea that there might be newer and better systems in the future. So far though, they haven’t been invented yet.

    • entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I mean, they don’t HAVE to, but if they choose not to, the board of directors will push for a change in CSUITE personnel

      If the board doesn’t maximize profit, the shareholders can sue them, so functionally they do have to.

      • Album@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        Specifically, the Board and thus the CEO must maximize company VALUE not profit.

        There are other ways to increase company value that do not necessarily result in Q/Q / Y/Y profit increases.

        But in the 1970s you get a guy named Milton Friedman who comes along with the concept of shareholder value in a 1970 essay for The New York Times, entitled “A Friedman Doctrine: The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits”.[5] In it, he argued that a company has no social responsibility to the public or society; its only responsibility is to its shareholders.

        So there’s been a lot of argument against it since esp as of late, but the economic hegemony still adheres to Friedman’s economic principles.

        • Tywèle [she|her]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          There are other ways to increase company value that do not necessarily result in Q/Q / Y/Y profit increases.

          Can you name some examples? I’m not very familiar with economics.

          • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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            A bigger market share (or just market size if it’s something new-fangled) at the expense of current profit, because that can turn into future profits. See most modern tech companies, which make a loss but still have value. For example, Uber just made a profit for the first time, and since they’re everywhere that’s a great position for a shareholder. People bought in in the past in hopes that this would eventually happen.

            OP is a little off, BTW. US law - and it’s probably the same elsewhere - says that the C-suite has to work in the interests of shareholders, who they represent as fiduciaries. It’s just that there’s only a few things a million APPL shareholders have in common, so in practice that interest is value and dividends. In a privately-owned company other things might factor in, for better or for worse.

            IANAL

    • megopie@beehaw.org
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      3 days ago

      Plenty of privately owned companies do the same things so I don’t think it can be chalked up to an issue with publicly traded companies.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        The minor difference is private can choose what they want to do. public has a fuduciary duty to increase value

        • orcrist@lemm.ee
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          That’s generally false. But even if it’s true, all the boss has to do is argue that medium-term profits will be generated by whatever policy they want to adopt. Since nobody knows the future, they might be right, and they’re legally rock solid.

          In other words, the duty to increase value produces unfalsifiable policy claims. So it is meaningless.

        • megopie@beehaw.org
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          public companies do not necessarily have a Fiduciary duty to the shareholders, let alone one to increase value. Any that they did have (based on the laws and how they are incorporated in a given jurisdiction) would also be applicable to a private company. Private companies also have shareholders, the shares are just not traded publicly.

          You’re probably thinking of the theory of “Shareholder Primacy” but that is a theory not a legal reality, although some insist it is based on a questionable interpretation of the precedent set by dodge vs ford motor company.

          Public companies can be run in what ever way the board/shareholders see fit.

      • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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        It’s all about who owns it and is sitting on the board.

        Bunch of old money type people? They don’t care too much about a bad year, more important to weather the storms and keep the generational money intact.

        Venture capitalists? Jack Welch this dogshit company and get us some short term gains!

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      TBF small businesses do this too on average. There’s some that don’t, but then there’s also some that straight up do crime, usually against employees.

      To solve this, you either want a well-regulated market, or no market (however that would work).

  • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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    3 days ago

    lol - I love that I canned all my paid subs that were fucking me up the arse like this, and then used the savings to setup a half-decent Plex server for my family. Fuck those greedy cunts.

    • karashta@lemm.ee
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      I keep telling my friends this. It was incredibly simple to do. And you can start with only a couple smaller 1 or 4 TB drives and still end up starting a decent collection

      • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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        Especially if you’re fine with the low image quality of streaming services. Equivalent video files aren’t particularly big.

        • freeman@feddit.org
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          Its about ~2-3GB for a movie for me. The Quality isnt great but still better than Netflix streams.

          • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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            I would recommend “spending” about 6 GB on a 1080p x265 encoding of a movie, if you can. The quality is much better, good enough to be viewed up close on a large screen, unless there’s a large amount of high frequency detail, like in recent animated or very CGI-heavy movies - or unless it’s an older film with strong film grain and/or large mass scenes (think Lawrence of Arabia). Those do benefit from higher bitrates and resolutions, even if your screen isn’t 4K.

    • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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      3 days ago

      These owners forgot that media is 100% discretionary spend AND has superior alternative that can be had close to free and a bit of labour…

      I know owners thinks we are all brain dead and only able to consoom… Is we tho?

    • Lets_Eat_Grandma@lemm.ee
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      Pretty much the only one i’m still happy with is crunchyroll. They don’t fuck around despite being basically the only game in town.

      Netflix I pay for begrudgingly but if they raise the price substantially or add mandatory ads EVER they are gonna be gone. I’m already pissed they are axing Kaos, like so many other good shows before it.

      Already axed prime last year due to them adding ads, I don’t even miss the expedited delivery because all the big box stores deliver for free, some even same day, at equivalent prices.

      Disney recently boned me out of account sharing, so my plex server is getting pimped out. $1000 buy gets you substantial NAS storage for 6-7 years. That’s ~$14/mo if you replace nothing for 6 years. By the time drives start dying the sizes double and you can expand your raid as they die off one by one.

      Anywho, Plex servers (and other FOSS alternatives now) usually have no problems transcoding and serving multiple 1080p and 4k streams concurrently. Plus you can download media for offline play within the respective server’s app on all kinds of devices, and for plex the server owner doesn’t need to license guests. That being said, non-plex options are what i’d go with because they are as good or better without any license cost. I just use plex because I bought a lifetime sub before the alternatives were mature. It’s nice having a library that only grows, never shrinks. No temporary licenses or content runs so I can have a massive backlog and not worry if I don’t get around to it for years. Just a lot of wins, no downsides that I know of.

      • LordJer@beehaw.org
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        Our household has gone full in on Plex. Bought an 8 TB hardrive to run the sever off my 10 year old gaming PC. Wife and I have been binging Downton Abbey. Digitized the series off blue-rays from the local local. However the blue-ray set didn’t have the Christmas Specials. My wife did not want to wait til I tracked down the specials. So we started to watch the specials on Amazon Prime Video. The picture encoding was awful. Not to mention all the bloody annoying ads. Not able to stomach the horrible picture quality anymore I hurriedly found a 1080p file and added it to our plex server. It was like night and day. I am not a high definition snob. Honestly I cannot tell the difference between 1080p and 4K. But the fact that I can stream better video quality from my 10 year old PC than through a multi billion dollar company is absurd.

      • averyminya@beehaw.org
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        3 days ago

        Crunchyroll has its own bullshit too tbh. It just happens to be that the industry is worse than their bs, so Crunchyrolls shenanigans is really just the anime industry.

  • shirro@aussie.zone
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    They cancelled one too many shows we liked a long time ago and we swore off Netflix for life. Never going back. If they ever make another good show I will wait awhile to see if they cancel it or ruin it before I go get it from somewhere else. They burned a lot of their old loyal customers that made them a success and now they have to acquire new customers faster than they lose them which isn’t sustainable.

  • Infynis@midwest.social
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    3 days ago

    Netflix’s content has gotten so much worse too. I don’t think there are many people left that have a subscription for more than one or two shows. And this seems to be a trend across all the different apps. Makes me glad I set up automatic torrenting for everything I’m interested in, and all it costs me is $5/month for Proton VPN

    • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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      3 days ago

      I don’t know about you but content has gotten better for me.

      Ranma 1/2, Squid Games, Super Mario Bros Movie, new season of Arcane. I felt like every 1-2 months, there was always something interesting.

      Also note that I don’t pay for Netflix. I do own stock.

      BUY MORE NETFLIX SUBSCRIPTIONS…

    • Retiring@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      For added convenience, skip the VPN and get a seedbox. If you consider the cost savings in hardware you spend even less.

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    3 days ago

    Friendly reminder that the high seas are always an option. Download stremio, install the torrentio addon, and you are good to go.

    • DdCno1@beehaw.org
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      Only use torrents if you know what you’re doing. In the developed world, this usually ends with a very expensive letter in your mailbox.

    • shatterling@lemm.ee
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      Absolutely my dude, stremio is fantastic. The only reason I still have Netflix is for my youngish kid and I haven’t found parental options for stremio yet