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Jordan Tucker

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Aug 2, 2024, 12:14:18 PM8/2/24
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According to a survey conducted by ed-tech provider Cengage, nearly 65% of students pay their educational expenses entirely by themselves. Along with the burden of student loans, students may also have car payments, phone bills, rent and other expenses. Sharing passwords for streaming services takes a load off their financial expenses.

Taylor Powers is a first-year double majoring in journalism and media and communication from Trenton, Ohio. She is a staff writer for The Student and an assistant editor for The Miami Student Magazine.

Look in the list on the left 'cookies on computer' for anything netflix, click them one by one and use the arrows in the middle to move them into 'cookies to keep'. (Or you could right click to do the same).

I was concerned for a bit that all the Netflix-related cookies that showed up had a Chrome icon next to them, and I was trying to find the cookies for the W10 UWP app. Does that app run on Chromium or something?

JUANA SUMMERS, HOST: Here's a sound that may soon be a memory for millions of people.(SOUNDBITE OF NETFLIX STARTUP SOUND)SUMMERS: Netflix plans to end password sharing, and as NPR's Neda Ulaby reports, many fans feel betrayed.NEDA ULABY, BYLINE: It's going to be like that scene in Netflix's "Stranger Things" when the heroes are trying to break into a top-secret facility.(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "STRANGER THINGS")DAVID HARBOUR: (As Jim Hopper) Give me the code.ULABY: Your Netflix code, or password, is going to fail.(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "STRANGER THINGS")HARBOUR: (As Jim Hopper) The code is wrong.ULABY: There will be havoc. There will be recriminatory phone calls.(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "STRANGER THINGS")BRETT GELMAN: (As Murray Bauman) I suppose it could be wrong.HARBOUR: (As Jim Hopper) How could it be wrong?GELMAN: (As Murray Bauman) The code is a number, a famous number.ULABY: But the only number that matters to Netflix is 100 million people. That's how many of us around the world are not paying but watching Netflix anyway. Among them are three people beloved by Michael O'Connor of Ireland. He shares his Netflix password with his mom, his sister and his partner.MICHAEL O'CONNOR: My first response was, I'm probably going to cancel my account.ULABY: O'Connor was already irritated with Netflix. First, he says, it's way more expensive than the other streamers if you're paying for the ad-free tiers. Second, Netflix has a habit of canceling his favorite shows.O'CONNOR: "The OA," "Warrior Nun" - oh, "The Dark Crystal" was really - it's really bad business.(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "THE DARK CRYSTAL: AGE OF RESISTANCE")UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR: (As character) I see many endings lain before us.ULABY: Previous password sharers will set up their own accounts, predicts Steven Cahall. He's an analyst for Wells Fargo Securities. The pool, he says, of brand-new subscribers has shrunk. And remember; this is not easy for Netflix, either.STEVEN CAHALL: Streaming services actually don't love to crack down on password sharing. They like people engaging with the content.ULABY: He says, try to see things from the point of view of Netflix and their shareholders.CAHALL: What they have to be worried about is a challenging ad market, a rising cost of capital, the decline of pay TV, the rising costs of sports, the slowdown of streaming and a writer's strike.ULABY: Do not be shocked, Cahall says, if other streaming services follow suit. But we may be losing something culturally meaningful, says Jessica Halem. She's 51 with a good job, but she uses her parents' password for HBO - I mean, sorry, Max.JESSICA HALEM: I do not need their financial support. But there's something about the gift - every time I log in to watch something knowing that my parents are paying for it - there's just something really sweet about it, right?ULABY: Just ask Carrie Bradshaw.(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "SEX AND THE CITY")SARAH JESSICA PARKER: (As Carrie Bradshaw) As soon as I typed in love, there he was.ULABY: It's not uncommon for people to share passwords with their exes, a little intimacy and access into the life of someone you love. Meanwhile, our Irishman, Michael O'Connor, says the whole situation might drive him back to reading.O'CONNOR: (Laughter) The books are usually better anyway.ULABY: And cost nothing to give away. Neda Ulaby, NPR News.(SOUNDBITE OF THE DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET'S "UNSQUARE DANCE")

could i ask you some silly favor could you write the password let in text file then copy it from that file then use it to login in netflix in both safari and brave just to make sure there was not mistake or issue with some key on your keyboard that play you

it happens only on netflix, other websites facebook and instagram are working, yeah i tried to copy from my phone and paste it on safari, it worked then i did the same on brave, no password incorrect.

There are situations that are more likely than not to be actual violations, such as consistent log-ins to the same account during prime time at several repeating geographic locations within the same city, or daily simultaneous use in different countries or continents. There may exist isolated cases of legitimate use even within these occurrences, but they are hard to imagine and would certainly be in the minority.

Unsupervised learning allows for users with similar viewing habits to be classified into clusters without having to identify those habits in advance. In the example below, 15,100 internet users are grouped into five clusters using 51 usage metrics. As can be seen in Figure 1, not all clusters contain the same number of users. In fact, Clusters 2, 3 and 5 contain only 25 users between them. If this were my data set, I would take a closer look at these clusters to try to understand how they differ from the remaining 15,075 people.

That information may be found in the parallel cord plot below in Figure 2, where each line represents a cluster. Looking at the leftmost extreme of the plot, it seems the three users in Cluster 5, on average, had a larger tot_HO (total hours online) than the users in any of the other clusters, on average. This may be one of the metrics that distinguishes this cluster from the others. There are others as well, as indicated in the portions of the plot where the lines deviate.

The next step would be to consider these differences and think logically about which clusters are composed of users who are most likely violating their service agreements. The nice thing about JMP is that initially, if nothing concrete emerges, the platforms are designed to let analysts keep exploring the data until something meaningful pops out at them. Once that happens, they'll have a good idea of the accounts to target the warnings.

From there, a streaming platform like Netflix could monitor these accounts to find out whether there are differences in their usage habits. Doing so might indicate that some of the accounts had multiple households sharing passwords, and the warnings were heeded. A clear outcome would be to do this as a test in a localized region and see if there is a spike in subscriptions in the days or weeks that followed.

Perhaps streaming companies have ways of monetizing viewership apart from the subscription fees, such as product placement, and would rather err on the side of more viewers rather than fewer. Of course, how many viewers gained versus subscription fees lost would be the type of information needed before making those decisions. JMP can be used at every step of this process. Our software enables domain experts to wade through large and complex data sets until insights emerge that only they, being experts, can understand. It further allows those experts to distill the insights and present them in a way that is easily digested by stakeholders, thus ensuring any resulting actions align with the strategic needs of the business.

It'll be interesting to see what actions the various streaming services take to address this issue moving forward. One thing is certain: They, like many other organizations, will have leveraged the power of analytics to inform and augment the decisions driving them.

the same appletv device was used for about a year, then sat in a box for a while and is now connected at a new location (new house, new ISP). i enter user/password that work on other devices including a TiVo and a Samsung blu-ray player. the same creditials worked fine on this same appleTV box previously. i've entered it multiple times. i've entered it using the original remote. i've entered it using text entry via the iphone remote app. neither works.

Same is happening to me since I downloaded the software update last night - and I've been using Apple TV consistently since I bought it a year ago. My iPhone 4S remote app also won't work with my Apple TV now either.

I can't even use the Apple Remote App, so I've been signing in with the AppleTV Remote. I get error 117 saying my username or password is incorrect even after I just signed in to Netflix.com via my computer. The date and time are correct on my TV and AppleTV.

this was definitely a bug - a rather bad one - and i hope it gets fixed (if it has not already been fixed, that is - i can't confirm one way or the other, since i've worked around the problem and can't easily reproduce it).

I'm having the same problem. Can't access Netflix through Apple TV says password is incorrect error 117. I typed a bunch even changed the password by going directly to Netflix on my computer and then back to ATV. Still can't get in. Did a reset and restore nothings changed.

I have recently purchased the apple tv and sign upto Netflix today. Works fine on my computer, my phone and my iPad. But no the atv just keeps coming up unable to login, I've tried resting, unplugging, changed password, tried both remote and remote app logins but nothing.

I tried that too still comes up unable to sign in. The account name or password you entered does not match an account in our records. Remeber your password is case sensitive. Need help signing in? Visit www.netflix.com/login help. And all that does is resets my password on the account which does exist.

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