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Netflix has once again made a controversial change to its Apple TV app. In recent weeks, the company has stopped using the native tvOS 26 video player in favour of a custom player similar to the one it uses on other TV platforms.

In practice, this makes the most common interactions more cumbersome and blocks users from using platform-specific Apple TV features.

Netflix’s Apple TV app is now very bad

The change began rolling out a few weeks ago, and user frustration is mounting. On Reddit, there’s a growing thread of Netflix subscribers saying they are cancelling their subscription because of this change to the Apple TV app.

In a separate thread on Reddit, one user explains the cumbersome process of simply rewinding or fast-forwarding by 10 seconds:

Did Netflix mess up the app? There are two extra clicks for a simple 10s rewind or fast forward. Instead of it going back 10s in one click, now it pauses and brings up the frame selector, and then you have to click again. Did they not do any research or usability testing before releasing this?

The change also means you lose access to full playback controls using the Apple TV Remote app on your iPhone. You can’t enable Enhance Dialogue from the video player. That clever Apple TV feature that automatically enables subtitles when you rewind? Gone.

One of my most-used tvOS video player features is the ability to tap the Siri Remote to see when what I’m currently watching will end. It’s great for trying to decide whether you have time for one more episode before bed. That feature is gone in Netflix as part of this change.

FlatpanelsHD has a great roundup of all the features on Apple TV that rely on an app using the native video player.

My guess is that it has something to do with advertising, and Netflix thinks it can use its own video player for better or more “immersive” advertising opportunities.

Netflix’s switch to a custom video only further exacerbates the company’s poor support for Apple TV in general. The company, for example, does not integrate with Apple’s TV and therefore does not support system tvOS features like the universal “Up Next” queue. Its use of the native Apple TV video player was really its only redeeming quality on the platform.

The core functionality and controls that this change ruined aren’t minor. They aren’t things you’ll only notice occasionally. Netflix’s video player botches even the most basic of tasks, such as requiring multiple button presses to rewind if you happened to miss a piece of dialogue. Netflix has fundamentally made its experience worse, and you’ll notice every time you use the app.

The timing is also pretty poetic: Netflix started rolling out this change at almost the exact same time it announced yet another price increase.

Here’s John Gruber:

Switching to their own custom video player also broke Netflix’s integration with the iPhone. Until last week, playing video in the Netflix app on Apple TV would put a live activity widget on your iPhone lock screen with the name of the current program, scrub location, and player controls. Now that’s gone.

This regression dropping the same week that Netflix announced price hikes makes me so angry that I’m giving even more thought to downgrading my family’s Netflix account from the $27/month Premium plan to the $20/month Standard plan. Sending Netflix only $240 per year instead of $324 will show them.

I no longer subscribe to Netflix, except for the “Netflix on Us” ad-supported plan I get for “free” through T-Mobile. I find the service doesn’t have much content I want to watch, and changes like this mean I definitely don’t want to give the company $27 per month.

Hopefully, Netflix sees the growing frustration from users and walks back this change. I wouldn’t hold my breath, though.

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Chance is the editor-in-chief of 9to5Mac, overseeing the entire site’s operations. He also hosts the 9to5Mac Daily and 9to5Mac Happy Hour podcasts. You can send tips, questions, and typos to [email protected].

Sourced from 9TO5Mac

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The streaming service might join its competitors in making a major change that may become an extra charge for users.

Apple TV+ might soon be planning to follow in the footsteps of its competitors who are starting to charge their users an extra fee to stream content without ads.

Several new hires at Apple in its advertising sector are pointing toward the reality that Apple TV+ is rapidly investing in building its TV advertising, according to a new report from Business Insider.

The report reveals that Apple has recently hired former NBCUniversal ad executive Joseph Cady as executive vice president of advanced advertising and partnerships. This comes after the company hired former NBCUniversal executive Jason Brum to join Apple’s video ad sales team in June last year.

A few months later in September, Apple hired former Peacock executive Chandler Taylor as a video ads account manager. Also in October, Jacqueline Bleazey, a former senior director of sponsorships and ad sales at FanDuel, joined Apple’s video advertising sales team.

The move from Apple comes after Amazon added ads to its Amazon Video content in January and offered customers the option to pay $2.99 a month on top of their $8.99 monthly subscription fee to remove them, a move that earned the company backlash from its users and a class-action lawsuit.

Netflix launched its ad-tier option in the U.S. in 2022 for $6.99 a month. The streaming giant has recently been planning to remove its cheapest Basic ad-free plan (which was discontinued for “new or re-joining members” in July 2023) for users in the U.K. and Canada this year and later hinted that the change would also affect U.S. customers.

YouTube has even started cracking down on users last year who use ad blockers to stream content ad-free on the platform. The platform began pushing a new notification to users warning them that their video playback would be disabled if they didn’t remove ad block from their web browser and reminded them that they can watch content ad-free by subscribing to YouTube Premium for $13.99 a month.

Apple TV+ currently does not have an ad-tier plan and only offers a $9.99 monthly subscription.

Even though many users have expressed outrage about the integration of ads into content that was once able to be streamed ad-free, Americans are warming up the idea of subscribing to ad tiers when it comes to streaming services. According to a recent survey by data company Disqo, 51% of respondents in the survey said they would likely pay for an ad-tier subscription plan while 37% were unsure.

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Patricia Battle is a Breaking/Trending News Writer for TheStreet’s trending section. Before joining TheStreet, Patricia was an Associate Editor for City & State NY, and prior to that, an Editorial Intern for The Garnette Report.

Sourced from The Street

By Phil Nickinson

Here we go again, folks. First it was Amazon Fire TV, with a large (and apparently unescapable) ad that invaded the home screen. And Chromecast with Google TV reportedly is starting to do the same sort of thing, at least if a singular post on Reddit is any indication.

I haven’t been able to replicate the experience on my Chromecast with Google TV. That might or might not be indicative of anything. For one, I don’t use the Chromecast as my usual device of choice (though it does end up in my gear bag on most trips). For another, I run a Pi-hole ad-blocker on my entire home network — and still very much think it’s a thing you should use if you have any sort of connected TV or streaming device. Finally, and more likely, this new home screen ad hasn’t seen a widespread rollout just yet.

In any event, nobody should be surprised by this turn of events, even if we don’t like it. Google’s job is to make money. And it does so by selling advertising. Same goes for Amazon Fire TV. Same goes for Roku. And you can absolutely make the argument that Amazon, Google, and Roku are now advertising companies first, and anything else second.

Google, for its part, just announced $9.2 billion in revenue from YouTube advertising in the fourth quarter of 2023 (up from $7.9 billion in the fourth quarter of 2022.) “We’re pleased with the NFL Sunday Ticket signups in our first season,” Philipp Schindler, Google senior vice president and chief business officer, said during the earnings call.

But it was advertising — not pure subscription numbers — that stood out in the mention of YouTube TV and NFL Sunday Ticket. By literally cornering the market on out-of-market Sunday NFL games, Google is able to sell that many more ads. Lucrative ones, no doubt.

“Advertisers can buy from an NFL lineup as part of our YouTube Select portfolio,” Schindler continued. “And this actually allows advertisers to reach football fans across YouTube’s pretty unique breadth of NFL content, independently of whether you are viewing live NFL games or on YouTube TV or Primetime Channels or watching NFL highlights or postgame commentary on YouTube channels.”

Roku makes things even more clear. It made $787 million in revenue on advertising in the third quarter of 2023, but only $125 million on hardware. It’s an advertising company first. Everything else second.

Which brings us to the obvious question: Is there a streaming device you can buy that won’t bombard you with advertising? The answer is “yes,” and it also happens to be the streaming box that we think is the best you can buy — Apple TV 4K.

A new search feature on Apple TV 4K.
The Apple TV 4K home screen is boring. But it also doesn’t have advertising. Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

You’re still going to get a lot out of Apple TV 4K even if you’re not in the Apple ecosystem. (I used it for years while I was still on Android phones.) In addition to hardware and software that practically lasts forever, you get a home screen that does not contain any display advertising. Not all ads are created equal, and display ads are the sort we’re talking about here. You’ll see the occasional (somewhat annoying) notification for a hot new show or movie on Apple TV. And you’ll eventually see a notification for a sporting event while you’re watching said game. It happens. And I still chuckle anytime it tells me to hop over to a “close” soccer match. They’re almost all close.

But Apple TV 4K does not have display ads. You won’t be tempted by a crispy chicken wrap. Or any other wrap. And definitely not any chicken. You’ll not see a home screen with much more than row upon row of app icons. The top row will give a couple show previews, but that’s hardly the same thing as a display ad.

That could one day change. Never say never, especially when potential revenue is concerned. But Apple, generally speaking, isn’t a company to sully its products with display ads, whether it’s on home screens or hardware. You’ll not find an ad attacking you from within the notifications of an iPhone, nor will you find a sticker affixed to the body of a MacBook letting the world know whose processor is inside. (Not even when Apple was still using Intel chips.)

For now, though? If you want the cleanest, ad-free user experience, there’s only one option. It’s not Google TV. It’s not Fire TV. It’s not Roku. And it’s none of the built-in TV operating systems.

It’s Apple TV 4K. Full stop.

By Phil Nickinson

Sourced from digitaltrends

 

As part of its big rollout of its new content services, Apple debuted a new short film for Apple TV+ featuring some of the most creative minds in film taking us inside their respective worlds on the anxieties and triumphs of their craft.

‘Storytellers’ was shot by Academy Award-winning cinematographer/filmmaker Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki. The film features iconic storytellers – Steven Spielberg, JJ Abrams, Sofia Coppola, Ron Howard, Octavia Spencer, Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Aniston, Damien Chazelle, M. Night Shyamalan and Hailee Steinfeld – who take us through the creative journey of telling stories that matter.

Sourced from The Drum