It’s a mistake because it is anti-user and diminishes their brand.
If they are struggling then then should work on quality, improve recommendation, and lower costs. Making a shittier product is only going to accelerate their death spiral.
I used to recommend Netflix to everyone, it was great. Now I recommend to no one. Soon, I’ll probably anti recommend.
An example of something that should be simple is to fix their recommendation engine. The nail that made me quit Netflix was they would recommend stuff I didn’t want to watch. And they would recommend whatever dumb new content they created. And I would find out about new shows on Netflix that seemed interesting to me through my feed on torrent tracker sites.
Netflix knows what I watch. They know what I upvote and downvote. They should be able to predict what I will like and show it to me in a list. They keep showing me stuff I don’t want over and over and that’s dumb and made me quit their service.
Jesus, then just don’t use their ads tier and you won’t ever have to see ads, or even evidence they exist. It’s not “anti-user”, it’s anti-prepend, apparently, and it ain’t all about you and your particular life circumstances. Some people can’t afford (or justify affording) Netflix but would enjoy watching Netflix content. This will allow them to.
And supporting ads and improving recommendations aren’t mutually exclusive, and to suggest the former will prevent the latter is a false dichotomy. How long have you thought that their recommendations have sucked? Months? Years? Always? And in all that time they didn’t improve things to your liking. How does building out an ads tier change that?
I think it’s accurate. The Netflix service historically had no ads, now they are adding a tier with ads.
Netflix has been pretty vocal on how much ads suck for users, and I agree.
I dropped Netflix because their content sucked and their prices were high and their recommendation engine was bad. And they were getting suckier and higher.
I expect that ads will creep up higher tiers and also push up prices on the ad free tiers.
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[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 35.4 ms ] threadIf they are struggling then then should work on quality, improve recommendation, and lower costs. Making a shittier product is only going to accelerate their death spiral.
I used to recommend Netflix to everyone, it was great. Now I recommend to no one. Soon, I’ll probably anti recommend.
An example of something that should be simple is to fix their recommendation engine. The nail that made me quit Netflix was they would recommend stuff I didn’t want to watch. And they would recommend whatever dumb new content they created. And I would find out about new shows on Netflix that seemed interesting to me through my feed on torrent tracker sites.
Netflix knows what I watch. They know what I upvote and downvote. They should be able to predict what I will like and show it to me in a list. They keep showing me stuff I don’t want over and over and that’s dumb and made me quit their service.
And supporting ads and improving recommendations aren’t mutually exclusive, and to suggest the former will prevent the latter is a false dichotomy. How long have you thought that their recommendations have sucked? Months? Years? Always? And in all that time they didn’t improve things to your liking. How does building out an ads tier change that?
Netflix is adding a new, cheaper tier that includes ads. If you pay for Netflix currently and don't downgrade to the cheaper tier, you won't get ads.
Netflix has been pretty vocal on how much ads suck for users, and I agree.
I dropped Netflix because their content sucked and their prices were high and their recommendation engine was bad. And they were getting suckier and higher.
I expect that ads will creep up higher tiers and also push up prices on the ad free tiers.
Netflix is becoming Blockbuster.
2. Increase prices for all tiers in the future.
And suddenly we've gone from $x for ad-free Netflix to the same amount but with ads.