Yeah, I don't think any streaming service locks you in for a year. It would negate one of the biggest draws which is being able to come and go as you wish.That would be unheard of, and sink the service.
Yeah, I don't think any streaming service locks you in for a year. It would negate one of the biggest draws which is being able to come and go as you wish.That would be unheard of, and sink the service.
That would be the worst business decision. People are already looking at monthly subscriptions for streaming services, and CBS altering their current model would spell a lot of trouble in the marketing department.Does anyone know for a *fact* that you will be able to sign up for CBSAA for a month, watch the entire first season (when it's all been released) and then cancel? Because were I CBS, I would probably lock people in for yearly subscriptions rather than the month to month option.
That would be unheard of, and sink the service.
I doubt that. Forcing people into service contracts is all the rage.
Not for streaming.
Not yet.
I once thought contracts for cable would never happen. Not only do they now happen, prices can go up even if no new services are added. So never say never, it could happen.
Really? Streaming services don't have contracts. Cellular service in the US has ditched contracts. I would say it is the opposite, from my point of view.I doubt that. Forcing people into service contracts is all the rage.
Yeah, I was trying to think of what contracts I'm locked in to now with most of my services. I can think of maybe one?Really? Streaming services don't have contracts. Cellular service in the US has ditched contracts. I would say it is the opposite, from my point of view.
You do know that costs go up? From having to renegotiate carrier fees to giving workers raises. The costs don't stay flat.
Yeah, the point is that people complain about having to pay on one medium while hoping (and expecting) that it's going to wind up in the bargain bin when it's a dying medium and there's no guarantee that'll happen. Will it end up at WalMart? Probably. When? Who the hell knows. You're not the only person I've seen to try and justify this clever end-round CBS's shameless money-grab.
I get your analogy though, so congrats on that. However it's faulty unless someone actually plans to watch repeatedly a show he couldn't be bothered to see when it first came out. Otherwise he just shifted from paying to $25 bucks when it to see it once when it streams to $50 bucks to see it once on a disc and then let it collect dust on a shelf. That's some savvy investing there.
The sooner most people just admit they're going to borrow someone's log in to watch it when everyone else on this board does the better we'll all be.
CBS doesn't care whether I pay for their streaming service or buy their DVDs/iTunes flies. All they care about is if I do one of those things. Either way, they still get my money.
Yeah, I don't think any streaming service locks you in for a year. It would negate one of the biggest draws which is being able to come and go as you wish.
Amazon Prime initially required you to pay for the year upfront.
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