Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

RiseInTheFuture.comRiseInTheFuture.com

Tech News

Netflix won the streaming wars, and we’re all about to pay for it

An illustration of the Netflix logo.
Illustration by Nick Barclay / The Verge

Whenever Netflix raises its prices — which seems to happen roughly as often as Ben Affleck falls in love with an A-list celebrity — the company always gives the same reason. It needs the extra money, you see, in order to keep investing in the kind of programming and product its 302 million subscribers demand. That’s how the standard monthly price of ad-free Netflix jumped from $7.99 to $17.99 over the course of the last 13 years, including a $2.50 jump just announced during the company’s recent earnings report. There’s still a $7.99 monthly plan, of course, but that one includes ads — and it’s a dollar more expensive than it was a week ago.

But let’s be real with each other. You want to know why Netflix keeps raising its prices? Because it can. Because Netflix won. The rest of the streaming industry is competing ferociously over a finite pool of money, dealing with carriage disputes because of dwindling subscriber numbers, and panicking over the future of TV. Netflix is the future of TV.

Over the last couple of years in particular, Netflix has gone from a solid streaming service to a practically unavoidable, virtually uncancellable part of mainstream culture. It has developed a…

Read the full story at The Verge.

You May Also Like

Tech News

Image: id Software After revealing its next Doom game last summer, id Software is almost ready to release it: the studio announced that Doom:...

Tech News

Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge OpenAI is releasing a “research preview” of an AI agent called Operator that can “go to the web...

Tech News

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Google is officially launching a new Android security feature for Pixel devices with Android 15 to prevent...

Tech News

Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images Meta and YouTube aren’t the only platforms looking to benefit from TikTok potentially disappearing — Substack...