• maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Chiefly, a bunch of compatibility issues arose because their ad tracking had a bunch of requirements for some reason. We went from being able to watch anything on our TV to only being able to watch Netflix in a laptop screen.

    Part of that is that we keep older hardware going. But that hasn’t been a problem for any other streaming service up until now.

    Not to mention that I was paying for … ads. Nah! I’m old enough to have gone through the same thing with cable TV. No ads at first, and then they crept in, and at some point you were sitting there wondering what you were paying for again.

    • Whirlybird@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      There are no “ads” on netflix though? Are you calling “here are shows that you can watch on the streaming service that you’re paying for” ads?

      I still don’t understand your sign up issue. Were you trying to sign up on a TV? There are no “ad tracking requirements” for any of their apps that run on a tv.

      • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        There are no “ads” on netflix though?

        There are. That’s part of the whole point of their current payment plan system and its new business model.

        I still don’t understand your sign up issue.

        It wasn’t a signup issue, it was a usability issue. For whatever reason, their new ad-based system introduced a bunch of tech requirements that meant stream options were all of a sudden limited, in a way, very conspicuously, no other streaming platform I’ve used is. In my situation, every other streaming platform could be played on my tv in some way. For Netflix though, that was either impossible or prohibitively difficult. This was on the ad plan. I’m not even sure if the ad-free plan would have been better, because all the limitations seemed to stem from the tech stack they were using.