this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
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My family shares our Netflix account. We live in different states, but all in the United States.

I used it yesterday and it was fine. But today it was not. I got the "you are not part of this household" message, with the three options being:

  1. make your own account
  2. make this location the household location
  3. I'm traveling

I watch a lot of random stuff, but mostly on different services. So, while it's kind of a bummer to uninstall Netflix, I have plenty of options. It's moreso just depressing that the enshittification has finally hit North America. Will probably see more of this stuff around on the internet soon, as I'm guessing I just got my number pulled before most people (which is doubly depressing since this we've had Netflix since like 2005 or something and were strong advocates of it when linear tv was still dominant - THAT'S CAPITALISM FOR YA!~)

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[โ€“] [email protected] -3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I understand that they've said that, and I'll re-iterate, as far as I'm aware Netflix's password sharing policy has always been for individuals living in the same household.

[โ€“] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

@Saganastic

@SCmSTR @bazus1 @SaltySalamander

When I ran into issues with too many people trying to stream at once, I had to upgrade to the most premium subscription which allows 4 simultaneous streams. Whether it was a black letter rule or not, the "more money for more simultaneous streams" policy goes hand in hand with shared accounts. How many households are going to need to simultaneously stream 4 different Netflix streams at the same time? Not to mention other oddities.

  1. they just developed the profile transfer feature alongside the password sharing crackdown. Previously, they supposedly didn't want people in different households to share an account, but had no solution for if you left a household.

  2. this gives a strong preference to households over families, which is not how other internet services work. When you send your kid to college, each year they need to make a new shared Netflix account with whichever roommate they have, and even mid-year if their roommates change. They can't share with their own parents. Imagine if cellphone family plans worked that way?

  3. why did they stop advertising that premium plans increase the number of people who can watch simultaneously? When I go to select a plan on Netflix right now, it's now religsted to a footnote. It used to be a prominent feature. It would seem to me that they are aware how counter-intuitive and misleading it is to advertise the amount of simultaneous streams your allowed when it's already limited to household members.