Streaming: Netflix is watching you

Yes, Netflix knows exactly how many times you've streamed the cheesy Christmas romance. The evaluation of the customers is part of the business, but many of them are not clear.

Streaming: Netflix is watching you
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  • Page 1 — Netflix watching You
  • Page 2 — Netflix registers every second
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    If a season is made for romantic comedies and family movies, it's The Christmas season. Modern families are not only relying on 267. Repetition of Kevin – home on TV alone, but of course y cover ir need for entertainment überStreamingangebote as well as Netflix. Due to feast re appeared in front of EinigenWochen own production a ChristmasPrince. A film, so Mittelmäßigwie Christmas galleries from supermarket, but at least pretty cheesy.

    Some Netflix customers seem to have liked a Christmas prince so much that y have looked at 18Tagen in a row. 53 customers were re to be exact. The SchriebNetflix in a tweet and even ironically asked who se people were so verletzthabe. 439,000 Twitter users liked this. But some didn't find it funny at all.

    "Eerie", some called it "big-bror-nonsense" is speech, from KommendenÜberwachungsstaat, and EinzelneNutzer ask why Netflix even presumes to ridicule individual customers authorwishes preferences and n question ir psyche. Yet ors find it seiüberhaupt not cool to spy on paying customers.

    To 53 people who've watched a Christmas prince every day for past 18 days: Who hurt you?

    — Netflix US (@netflix) December 11, 2017

    As for reactions on Netflix ' in itself harmless Tweetzeigen: Many users still do not yet know that "customer espionage" in sense of evaluating individual Sehverhaltens has always been a derErfolgsgeheimnisse of Streamingplattform. From this, Netflix makes itself no secret, but regularly explains how service cuts offer on IndividuelleZuschauer – of course, with aim of tying m up before screen as long as possible.

    Personalized thumbnails

    with personalized thumbnails. The Prinzipdahinter told technicians of service only last week in a blog post. Netflix not only tests which previews FürFilme and series best arrive among all viewers. But it also passtsie to preferences of individual spectators.

    How this works, Netflix shows example of good Will Hunting. Viewers who have watched Zuvorviele romantic comedies on Netflix will get a preview image that actor Matt Damon and Minnie Driver Gemeinsamzeigt. Male users who love comedy will instead get a preview image with Robin Williams displayed. This is how viewers are to be lured into film, because only ten percent of all users are actually looking for Aktivnach titles, company claims. The remaining 90 percent verlassensich on what Netflix suggests to you.

    Tens of thousands of genres to choose from

    In order to be able to cut content more precisely, Netflixnicht uses only classical genre names such as thriller or documentary. Instead, employees assign each movie and episode of a Seriemehrere keywords that focus on content, but also Narrative form, actors and representations of violence.

    These keywords in turn create ZehntausendeGenres, as users have found out for past two years. For example "Gory B-horror movies from 1980s" or "skateboarding non-fiction". These atomisiertenGenres are not officially found on platform, but in background y are used by algorithms to make users even better Empfehlungenauszusprechen. For good reason, Netflix says ' Europe spokesman YannLafargue: "When a user opens Netflix, we have between 90 and 120Sekunden time. If he does not find anything relevant during this period, Wirihn have lost. "

    Date Of Update: 14 December 2017, 12:03
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