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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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There is nothing ideological about this. It's about what is best value to the consumer. Incidentally, the 'depressing take' was my observation on your comment, not on consumer choice. Read it again. |
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---------- Post added at 20:20 ---------- Previous post was at 20:02 ---------- I’ll humour you though... Three Unlimited Data £18 BT 500MB £58 Now TV Sky Sports £33 Now TV Sky Movies £12 BT Sports £25. Already exceeded the RRP of Ultimate Oomph and can’t even record, have no basic entertainment or kids channels. |
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---------- Post added at 09:20 ---------- Previous post was at 09:17 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
People come for the argu..err banter.
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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
I do have Virgin Media as confirmed in a number of posts. By “humouring” you Old Boy I’ve demonstrated that my package with Virgin is cheaper than the like for like alternatives contrary to your claim.
I know you struggle with the concept people get value from Sky or Virgin Media over streamers, which I believed was down to your poor judgement, but I stand corrected if it’s caused by failing eyesight. |
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I have acknowledged in previous posts that sport is expensive and my assertion that streamers are better value clearly does not cover that. However, I remain convinced that prices for sport will come down over time, once the Sky/BT stranglehold on the footie is breached. I have no problem whatsoever in understanding the value people get from Sky and VM. What I am saying is that the streamers are better value. Sport excepted, of course, we don't disagree on that. ---------- Post added at 12:03 ---------- Previous post was at 11:58 ---------- Quote:
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Given that sport is your passion, your choice of Virgin to watch it is understandable, of course. Hopefully, there will be better times ahead. |
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“Better times ahead”?
This is where you’re running along the wrong track Old Boy. You assume that there’s something wrong with the present. Unless streaming lowers the costs to end users - and I see no evidence of how - the consumers are relatively well served by the current marketplace taking products from Now TV Sports at the low end to full package Sky/Virgin/BT at the top. Thus far you’ve offered no business model other than “deep pockets”. |
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You haven't explained this in any detail at any point. Please find one explanation and copy and paste it - this shouldn't be a particularly arduous task for someone as passionate as yourself about streaming to do, given you've spent six years making the same points over and over all I'm asking you to do is justify your position once. |
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I have explained previously that Sky's approach is to charge the maximum possible price and keep all the rights to itself. The example I gave before set out how Amazon, with its retail arm, could sell other products on the back of sports rights. It would gain additional Prime customers, encouraging them to shop on Amazon's site, and it could market football paraphernalia on the actual football channel site. It could grant non-exclusive rights of some matches to the terrestrial channels to generate further income, as well as allowing highlights to be shown on other channels after the event. Sky's approach is not the only one. Instead of charging sky high prices for these matches, they could reduce the price and make it accessible to more people. They could also offer a range of packages which might attract more uptake. Amazon might even offer football as a loss leader to promote other parts of its business, as it did for the rights already acquired to screen the Premier league matches. Amazon gave us those matches at no extra charge, something that I dare say Sky would never have contemplated. I think the mistake people are making is to imagine that Amazon would operate in the same way as Sky does, fleecing customers for all its worth. I don't think it needs to be like that and I believe that Amazon would have a different approach. Of course, it would be different for other streamers such as DAZN, who do not have a retail arm, but for them it would be more of a straight forward question of whether it would be worth it for them, drawing on their experience of acquiring rights for sport elsewhere. There would still be the other areas of flexibility on price and awarding non-exclusive rights, etc, though. I'm not sure whether DAZN's pockets are deep enough to take on Sky and BT, but Amazon has no such problems. |
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Streaming getting involved in Sports Rights is bound to increase the cost to the user, as sky/BT will try to retain their shares whilst streamers will have to bid big to capture anything apart from low-hanging fruit. In the medium term (say 10-15 years) customers will need to pay more for what they currently get as linear tv/streaming battle it out ---------- Post added at 16:30 ---------- Previous post was at 16:23 ---------- Quote:
Despite taking no money, the sports channels remained available so I was able to view past recordings and also watch live matches as they became available without any payment. Additionally, when EPL restarted, I was treated to over 20 extra EPL matches on Sky and 15 or so extra on BT - at no extra cost. Hardly fits with your assessment of Sky! |
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It is another £3 to get Now TV in full HD.
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Amazon already have 6.7m Prime subscribers - the low hanging fruit - and this number would need to be substantially driven up as a 'loss leader' to recoup the cost of the rights. |
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