The Sorority (2025)days of being able to share a single streaming service account with your family and friends are quickly coming to an end.
Max, the Warner Bros. Discovery-owned streaming service formerly known as HBO Max, is the latest company to announcethat it will be cracking down on accounts it suspects of password-sharing.
SEE ALSO: Netflix password-sharing restrictions are now globalThe news of Max's password-sharing crackdown comes directly from Warner Bros. Discovery CEO JB Perrette while speaking at Morgan Stanley’s 2024 Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on Monday.
Max will begin informing password-sharing subscribers of the company's new policy enforcement later this year with the intent to fully roll out paid sharing in 2025.
This news shouldn't be all too surprising. Max is just the latest streaming service on the growing list of providers cracking down on password-sharing. Netflix was the first of the big streamers to end password-sharing last year. Disney followed suit just last month by prohibiting password-sharing in its policies for Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+.
Password-sharing. as viewed by most of these streaming services, is typically defined as a paying subscriber allowing individuals outside of their household access to their account. Streamers typically provide plans which allow for multiple devices within a household to access content on a single paid account. However, allowing others outside the paying subscribers' household to do so is quickly becoming against the rules across the industry.
Streaming services that have already instituted crackdowns have typically sent out emails warning users suspected of password-sharing. Netflix has rolled out add-on plans which allow subscribers to pay extra to add individuals outside of their household to their account. Disney's streaming services have yet to provide such an offering to customers but plan to launch such a feature later this year.
SEE ALSO: Hulu and ESPN+ will crack down on password sharing, following Disney+The news comes as Max struggles to grow in the highly competitive streaming TV market. Warner Bros. Discovery made a highly controversial decision last year when it decided to drop the popular "HBO" brand in its streaming services name, turning HBO Max into just "Max." At the end of 2023, the company announced that Max had 52 million subscribers, down more than two and a half million subscribers from the previous year.
However, the original shows on Max are among the most sought out. HBO's Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, and The Last of Ushave topped the most-pirated show lists over the year.
While Max's decision to put a stop to password-sharing may be unpopular among users who are, well, sharing passwords, it's proven to be successful for other streaming services. Netflix saw tens of thousands of new signupsin just the two days immediately after it cracked down on the practice. By the end of that quarter, Netflix added 8.8 millionnew subscribers, significantly more than the 2.4 million new subscribers it saw the previous quarter when users could still share their passwords.
We'll soon see if Max is just as successful with its own password-sharing crackdown.
Topics HBO Netflix Streaming
Previous:Bomb Envy
Bumbling Trump adviser Kris Kobach's secret plan for America, revealedKid Cudi publicly thanks collaborators and industry peers in touching letterThis NFL quarterback is the MVP of yelling thingsAdd emus to the list of Australian wildlife you should totally avoidPM Narendra Modi wants your views on demonetization via his app'League of Legends' team's board game is a labor of love30 gift ideas for your NetflixEarth's mini moon could be a chunk of the big moon, scientists sayTeens have officially gone off the deep end with the #BackpackChallengeUnder Trump, dark days ahead for net neutrality and the open internetPewDiePie is taking a YouTube breakTsunami warning issued for Fukushima, Japan after powerful earthquakeDonald Trump's grandfather was banned from Germany for avoiding military serviceAirline in hot water as teen sues for burn damages to his groin regionsHere's what Emma Watson thinks of 'Fantastic Beasts'Dumb dude tries to buy beer with a photocopied Rs 2,000 note in Mumbai, gets caughtTeens have officially gone off the deep end with the #BackpackChallengeHow Black Lives Matter activists interrupted a popular tree30 gift ideas for your NetflixCrowdfunding is giving parents all the baby gear they didn't know they needed #ReadEverywhere, Even As You Slide Unconventional, Part 5: Terry Southern Takes on the Fakes The Family Acid by Dan Piepenbring Secrets of the Trade The Strange Allure of Watching “How It’s Made” See The Paris Review’s Prints on Display at Harvard Square Redeeming Greek Speak: An Interview with Ben Nugent Now Online: Our Interviews with Robert Caro and Luc Sante Meet Me in the Electrified Dome at the Temple of Hymen Unconventional, Part 6: Ed Sanders and the Police When Ernest Hemingway Hung Out with Wolverine Mourning the Unrealized Promise of Aerosolized Foods Prison Lit: Jones Very’s Words from the Asylum In Which Chester Himes Petitions to Save His Cat, Griot #ReadEverywhere, Even in the Trees Staff Picks: Scott McClanahan, Abner Dean, Todd Solondz Hamtramck Disneyland, a Cubist Carnival in Michigan When James Baldwin Baited the FBI People Who Read Books Live Longer Bess Wohl’s play ‘Small Mouth Sounds’ returns to the stage.
1.9085s , 10135.9921875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Sorority (2025)】,Creation Information Network