ELi5 Netflix said they will charge more if someone outside of your household uses it. How can they tell?

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If it’s based on IP address, wouldn’t me veiwing on mobile be affected? If I travel and log in through a hotel wifi, do I have to pay extra every month?

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20 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It will probably be done similar to how Hulu does it. You must log in to the (home) ip address using that device once every month or so to verify that you’re a legitimate family member. They can determine your location using IP address, and Roku or cell phone or Amazon fire devices will report your location as well.

Anonymous 0 Comments

what are people that own multiple homes going to do?

Anonymous 0 Comments

The sum of my indifference for their programming, annoyance with random price increases, and apathy for updating profiles passwords and account information, equals I can live without Netflix

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’ve got a plex server.

If they make it inconvenient for my 5 streams, (i pay for 5 streams.. i don’t care from where, … ) .. if they say it’s only 5 streams in a house, they’ll lose out on 24 dollars a month.

PLEX FTW

Anonymous 0 Comments

In the EU we legally have the right to access any subscriptions anywhere in the EU. If Netflix try to charge people extra for using it in another country they will face a huge fine.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Netflix have a careful balance of annoying existing customers vs bringing in extra money – I expect there’s a lot of parents sharing with a kid that’s moved out who will just pay the extra couple of dollars, because Netflix is right, they are account sharing and a couple of dollars is neither here or there for the parents, so they pay. I expect their detection will be reasonably forgiving and they’ll be looking to find obvious abuse use of their subscription. They have a lot of heuristics to make this decision off.

For example they’ll know if the device is a portable or static one. If there’s two profiles, signed in on two TVs and one profile is *only* used in New York and the other in California – often used *at the same time* in the evening, its probably not someone who travels for work a lot, and instead is a parent sharing their account with a kid who’s moved out. If, in a similar scenario, the device used in New York was a phone, and there’s a drop in use in California whenever the phone is used to view videos in New York – well that’s more likely to be someone travelling.

Some heuristics that could be used:

* IP location
* Other devices on network
* When and what is watched
* Simultaneous use
* Number of users
* Profiles
* Other accounts on the same network
* Device type
* Affluence of IP addresses
* Is the IP a University
* Movement of devices
* Sudden creation of new profiles used elsewhere
And many more……

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

They know. Remember tech companies spying on us was a big deal once. They know exactly who you are.

Anonymous 0 Comments

People should just stop using Netflix. They must be doing it because they know more than half the people share and they know they would be making a lot more money if people couldn’t share . They already made it worse by increasing the price and now they will have ads for the cheapest option. People must still be paying for the higher price so they think almost everyone can afford it.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It will be done via device ID, so you can use netflix on your laptop/mobile while travelling with no issues, if you want to register netflix to a TV outside your home, you get 2 weeks or if you want longer at that point you have to pay extra