The Sunday Guardian

Password sharing remains the curse of streaming apps

- LISA RICHWINE & JESSICA TOONKEL

More than one-fifth of young adults wh o s t r e a m shows like or borrow passwords from people who do not live with them, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, a finding that suggests media companies are missing out on significan­t revenue as digital viewership explodes.

21% of streaming viewers ages 18 to 24 said they had accessed at least one digital video service such as Netflix, HBO Now or Hulu by using log-in credential­s from someone outside their household at some time. Overall, 12% of adults said they did the same thing.

Subscripti­on revenue is likely to come under scrutiny starting next week when TV industry players begin reporting quarterly earnings. Netflix, the dominant streaming service, releases its results on Monday.

Up to now, Netflix and other streaming networks have accepted some passwordsh­aring, but they may face pressure from investors to change course if new signups slow substantia­lly, Wall Street analysts said. Revenue growth at Netflix is projected to drop from 31% in this year’s second quarter to 19% in the second quarter of next year, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

“If Netflix goes from a 30% revenue growth story to a 10% story, there is absolutely going to be more focus on their leaving money on the table,” said Justin Patterson, an analyst with Raymond James.

Netflix declined to comment.

Respondent­s to the Reuters/Ipsos survey said they borrow passwords to save money on video subscripti­ons, which can be cheap on their own but add up with multiple services.

Donielle Bradshaw, a livein nanny in Smyrna, Georgia, said she uses her 28-year-old sister’s password for Hulu, and her 32-year-old brother’s password for Netflix.

“I feel like since we are family, it’s OK,” said the 22-yearold Bradshaw, who estimates she watches four hours of shows on weeknights and 10 hours a day on weekends.

If companies cracked down on password sharing, Bradshaw said she would be willing to pay for her own Netflix subscripti­on but is not sure about Hulu, which is owned by several media companies. “I binge a lot of shows on Netflix. I don’t think I could do without it,” she said.

Companies say they accept some sharing as a way to promote their programmin­g to potential customers, but they also take steps to curtail blatant freeloadin­g.

Many networks limit the number of people who can watch programmin­g at the same time. Netflix, for example, allows two to four simultaneo­us streams per subscripti­on, depending on the plan, and charges more for the higher number of streams.

HBO, a unit of Time Warner, actually encourages younger viewers to use its HBO Now and HBO Go services for free by offering it to about 100 US colleges and universiti­es.

“For us it’s more important that at that age where they are not financiall­y independen­t quite yet, they are habituatin­g to using the product to ultimately aspiring to becoming paid customers,” Bernadette Aulestia, executive vice president of global distributi­on, said in an interview.

Netflix executives also have said they know some viewers share passwords.

“We could crack down on it, but you wouldn’t suddenly turn all those folks to paid users,” Netflix Chief Financial Officer David Wells said at a Goldman Sachs conference last September.

Missing a Chance

Industry analysts say companies are missing a chance to grow revenue. An analysis by Parks Associates estimated streaming providers will lose $550 million in 2019 from password sharing.

“There has been this kind of cavalier attitude about it,” Parks Associates analyst Glenn Hower said. “It hasn’t been a priority.”

Companies could crack down if they want. Cisco Systems, for example, sells products that can detect abnormal activity on an account such as an unusual time or place, said Conrad Clemson, Cisco’s senior vice president and general manager of service provider platforms and applicatio­ns.

Cisco’s customers, which include streaming services and pay TV distributo­rs, decide whether to use the informatio­n simply for monitoring or take additional steps such as sending a warning to account holders or shutting down an account, he said.

“A lot of service providers and content providers are very much in the experiment­al phase right now,”he said.

Streaming providers say they do track account use but have provided few specifics.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online in English throughout the United States from June 8 to June 26. It gathered responses from 4,453 adults, including 3,557 people who said they streamed video from their cable TV provider or from standalone services like Amazon Prime, Hulu or Netflix. The poll has a credibilit­y interval, a measure of accuracy, of 2 percentage points. REUTERS

Industry analysts say companies are missing a chance to grow revenue. An analysis by Parks Associates estimated streaming providers will lose $550 million in 2019 from password sharing

 ??  ?? Media companies are missing out on significan­t revenue due to password sharing.
Media companies are missing out on significan­t revenue due to password sharing.

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