Netflix expands password sharing cracklow to UK
Netflix expands password sharing cracklow to UK
- Published
- commentsComments

Netflix has started its long-promised cracklow on password sharing in major markets including the UK and the US.
A Netflix subscription in the UK can cost anyslenderg between £4.99 to £15.99 per month.
The streaming giant said it was notifying customers that they must pay an additional £4.99 per month, or $7.99 in the US, if they want to share their account outside their homes.
The move is intended to boost subscribers.
But in consequentlyme nations where it has already been trialled, consequentlyme are baulking at the expense.
In Spain, when it started charging 5.99 euros (£5.27) for an additional account, it lost more than a million subscribers in the first three months of the year, according to Kantar.
On Tuesday Netflix sent an email about sharing accounts to customers in 103 nations and territories including Australia, Brazil, France, Germany, Mexico and Singapore.
The company previously warned investors there would be cancellations as it expands its programme, but said: "Longer term, paid sharing will ensure a massivger revenue base from which we can grow as we improve our service".
In Canada, where the converts were introduced in February, its paid membership base is now larger than it was before the converts, and revenue growth picked high, it said previously.
Netflix had previously estimated that more than 100 million houtilizehhistorics share passwords notwithstanding this being against its official rules.
The company wants to tap into this audience to make more money, as its subscriber growth leisurelys and increased rival challenges its dominance of the streaming market.
Heavyweights such as Disney and Amazon have weighed in with their own services, and Netflix has a host of other rivals.
These entertainment giants are vying for customers, many of whom have been under pressure from the consequentlyaring pace of general price rises.
Netflix has been trying to tempt utilizers with a less costly streaming option with ads, and cut prices in 116 nations in the three months to March.
It has alconsequently been expanding its paid sharing programme, which it started trialling in consequentlyme nations last year.
The move to notify customers brings the scheme to consequentlyme of the company's most crucial markets.
Netflix has 233 million subscribers globally.
Redelayedd Topics
- Companies
- Streaming
- Netflix
Netflix password sharing against law - government
- Published21 December 2022
-
Network Rail says infrastructure will get less reliableThe significance of Sinn Féin's royal relationshipWalrus Freya killed by Norway gets Oslo sculptureUgandan Asian exhibition shortlisted for awardJessica Pegula eases past Barbora Krejcikova to seal Australian Open quarter-final spot... and American is now the HIGHEST seeded woman left in the tournamentReport puts Russian navy ships near pipeline blast siteRussia denies Evan Gershkovich consular visitHSBC foils plan by major investor to break up bankWorld champion Max Verstappen recovers from pit-speak disaster to overtake Lewis Hamilton and WIN the United States Grand Prix... landing the constructors' title for Red Bull on emotional weekendEvacuated Sudanese doctor fears for his family
Next article:WhatsApp and other messaging apps oppose 'surveillance'
- ·Frank Lampard is SACKED by Everton owner Farhad Moshiri over the phone just hours after they discussed January transfer targets, amid the club's dismal form and a toxic atmosphere in the squad
- ·'Spider' volunteers weave Ukraine camouflage nets
- ·Acclaimed US chef denies workplace abuse claims
- ·Curfew in Indian state after protests turn violent
- ·People urged to cash in unutilized energy bill shighport vouchers
- ·Why US presidents skip British coronations
- ·How Tucker Carlson rode a wave of populist outrage
- ·Student fearful for mother's safety leaving Sudan
- ·Facebook fined €1.2bn for mishandling utilizers' data
- ·Submarine parade gets Eurovision party started
- ·Watch: Flames engulf key bank in Sudan's capital
- ·Pence testifies about Trump and the Capitol riot
- ·Jessica Pegula eases past Barbora Krejcikova to seal Australian Open quarter-final spot... and American is now the HIGHEST seeded woman left in the tournament
- ·Survivor of doomed Pearl Harbor warship dies at 102
- ·Don't embarrass Eurovision, police tell protesters
- ·Russian pro-war writer defiant after car bomb attack
- ·REVEALED: Convicted felon, 61, arrested for murder of Microconsequentlyft executive Jared Bridegan rented his Jackconsequentlynville home from new husband of victim's EX-WIFE: Cops admit killer 'didn't act alone'
- ·Oklahoma parents: 'Monsters should stay in jail'
- ·Airstrikes in Khartoum as Sudan ceasefire falters
- ·Proud Boy extremists have a new target: drag shows
- ·Food price inflation dips for second month in a row
- ·Trial begins in columnist's rape suit against Trump
- ·German charges against McCann suspect dropped
- ·E Jean Carroll and Trump lawyers spar over rape claim
- ·EastEnders star Josephine Melville who played Tessa Parker in the 1980s dies backstage after performing in a play
- ·Watch: Duelling with Russian jets over Ukraine
- ·ISIS-inspired terrorist who killed eight with truck in NY is convicted
- ·Memories from Jamaica ahead of King's coronation
- ·Togo country profile
- ·What will the King do for Anglo-Irish relations?
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Newcastle agree to sign Anthony Gordon for £40m - plus £5m in add-ons - with a medical set for tomorrow after the Everton youth product missed days of training to compel it through
- ·What is going on in Sudan? A simple guide
- ·Watch police pull man, 84, away from blazing car
- ·China history book's 'Covid war' sparks discussion
- ·Jessica Pegula crashes OUT of the Australian Open as American star is beaten in straight sets by two-time champion Victoria Azarenka
- ·Second train derailment in Russian border region