Disney+ to Begin Password Sharing Crackdown This November in Canada

Disney+ will begin restricting password sharing starting November 1 in Canada. Subscribers in the region received an email stating they’ll soon be prohibited from sharing accounts with people outside their ‘household.’ Household, in this case, refers to the devices associated with a primary personal address used by people living within the same residence. The announcement isn’t quite clear, so the impression I’m getting is that as long as outsiders sign in at the main account holder’s residence, they could qualify as members of the ‘household’? There are no details on how Disney plans to enforce this policy, but it promises to always monitor account activity to see if people are complying with it.

Indeed, if Disney+ realises or believes its users are breaking the rules, access to the streaming platform might get limited or entirely terminated. “You will be responsible for any use of your account by your household, including compliance with this section,” the new agreement reads (via MobileSyrup). During its Q3 2023 earnings call, last month, Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed that his team was aware that a ‘significant’ number of users had been sharing passwords with friends and family, and that the company has the ‘technical capability’ to monitor those sign-ins. At the time, he alluded that crackdown plans might start sometime in 2024, though now it seems like Disney+ jumped the gun a little.

Interestingly, a phrase on the agreement — “Unless otherwise permitted by your Service Tier” — suggests that certain Disney+ tiers might let you share passwords, after all. Of course, this would be the more expensive tier, which I’m guessing will work similarly to Netflix’s new policies that let users add extra members to their accounts for a higher monthly subscription fee. The latter was among the first major streaming platforms to begin cracking down on account sharing by tracking IP addresses and asking for verification codes every 31 days. For now, it’s unclear if Disney+ will follow the same methods and as to what new subscription plans it might introduce. However, Iger’s primary concern is that once people get booted off someone else’s Disney+ account, how many are willing to become new subscribers and boost revenue for the company?

Despite the initial backlash, the password-sharing crackdown approach seems to have heavily worked in favour of Netflix, which reported a climb of 6 million new subscriptions in July, for a total of 238 million subscribers. Meanwhile, Disney+ has been struggling to maintain its numbers — specifically, the Disney+ Hotstar segment, which lost a staggering 12.5 million subscribers from April to June, dropping from 52.9 million to 40.4 million subscribers. The drop largely had to do with the platform losing the rights to livestream IPL (Indian Premier League) cricket to Viacom18 until 2027. Another contributing factor has to be the removal of all HBO content from Disney+ Hotstar, which caused many on the internet (including me) to question whether the subscription was still worth it.


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Jim Cramer urges investors to buy Disney stock, prompting critics to joke: ‘Time to short’

Bob Iger’s return as CEO of The Walt Disney Company has Jim Cramer bullish on the Mouse House, but critics of the CNBC investment maven say that’s as good a reason as any to bet that the stock price is going to fall.

“Disney, pay 98 if you can. That will be nothing …versus where it goes,” Cramer tweeted on Sunday night at around the same time that it was learned Disney’s board of directors had pushed out Bob Chapek and replaced him with his predecessor, Iger.

Shares of Disney opened north of $100 at the opening bell on Wall Street on Monday as investors hailed the decision by the company’s board to reinstall Iger at the helm of the media and entertainment behemoth.

As of just past noon time on Monday, Disney stock was trading at $96.68 a share. The stock price soared by some 10% in premarket trading in reaction to the news of Iger’s return.

Cramer’s critics on Monday trolled the CNBC analyst, saying it was time to run for cover.

Jim Cramer is advising investors to buy stock in Disney after the company replaced CEO Bob Chapek with his predecessor, Bob Iger.
Getty Images
Jim Cramer urged investors to buy up stock in Disney.
CNBC

“Disney is doomed,” tweeted one Twitter user who attached Cramer’s face onto the Deadpool superhero who is part of Marvel Comics’ stable of characters. Marvel is a subsidiary of Disney.

Another Twitter user posted a meme depicting Mickey Mouse with a gun pointed to his head.

“Sigh, puts it is,” tweeted another Cramer troll. In stock trading, a put is a type of option that increases in value as the share price falls.

“Time to short,” quipped another Twitter user.

“Shorting” a stock means to borrow shares that the investor thinks will decrease in value. The investor would then sell the shares on the open market at a lower price and pocket the different, thus turning a profit by betting against the stock.

Disney’s board of directors announced on Sunday that Bob Iger would return as CEO, replacing his handpicked successor, Bob Chapek.
Getty Images for Disney

Cramer has been a frequent target of criticism on social media for stock tips and investment advice that have missed the target.

Last month, Cramer appeared on the verge of tears when he offered up an emotional on-air apology for touting Meta, Facebook’s parent company which has seen its stock price plummet in the last year.

Chapek, who has spent decades at Disney, ends his tumultuous two-and-a-half year run as CEO.
REUTERS

“I made a mistake here,” Cramer said, his voice halting and trembling as he spoke. “I was wrong.”

Cramer has gained a reputation online as an untrustworthy prognosticator of the stock market as Twitter and Reddit trolls have frequently trended the term “Inverse Cramer” — the idea being that investors should do the opposite of whatever the CNBC personality recommends.

One fund manager, Tuttle Capital Management, has taken the concept further, filing prospectuses for two Cramer-tracking funds — the “Inverse Cramer ETF” and the “Long Cramer,” according to Nasdaq.



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Disney’s New CEO May Have to Cut Costs to Restore Profits as Streaming Loses Money

Bob Iger must show Wall Street a new side to his character as he returns to lead Walt Disney by cutting costs and restoring profits in just two years after splurging cash on acquisitions and a streaming business last time round.

The entertainment giant shocked investors late on Sunday evening announcing the ouster of Chief Executive Bob Chapek and appointing Iger, 71, to a two-year contract to return the company to growth.

The move evoked other return engagements such as Steve Jobs‘ return to Apple and Howard Schultz’s return to Starbucks in times of crisis.

“The bold move (Iger’s return) might feel like the right one. However, the business is at a different phase of growth,” said PP Foresight analyst Paolo Pescatore, adding that short-term measures might include restriction of some operations.

The most immediate target of that could be Disney+, the streaming service that Iger helped launch in 2019. Losses at the unit more than doubled in the last reported quarter to $1.5 billion (nearly Rs. 1,220 crore).

The business has become a drag on earnings as Disney spends heavily on content to attract subscribers, testing investor patience and contributing to a 40 percent slide in its shares so far this year.

“Disney+ … could probably do better with fewer end-state subscribers made up of super fans willing to pay high RPU (rates per user), which would generate much higher margins,” analysts at MoffettNathanson said.

They also pointed to ESPN as another target for deep cost cuts, including a review of all the upcoming sports rights as the network loses cable subscribers.

Activist investor Dan Loeb’s Third Point had also pushed a potential spin-off of ESPN when it took a stake in the company in August, although it later backed off the idea.

Some brokerages have also raised concern on whether the two-year period Iger has agreed to return for would be enough to transform the business and find a successor.

“The problem is that Iger can’t stay on forever. He already bumbled the transition to Tom Staggs in 2016 and now (Bob) Chapek,” Rosenblatt Securities said.

Still, Disney shares were 10 percent higher in premarket trading on Monday, a sign of confidence in the executive who led the company for 15 years.

© Thomson Reuters 2022

 


 

 

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Disney Found Substantial Number of Twitter Users Fake in 2016, Says Former CEO Bob Iger

Disney had purportedly weighed the option of purchasing Twitter back in 2016, revealed former Disney CEO Bob Iger while speaking at the Code Conference in Beverly Hills, California, on Wednesday. Iger claimed that Disney discovered, with the help of Twitter, that a ‘substantial portion’ of Twitter’s user base consisted of fake accounts. Walt Disney and Twitter were purportedly ready to enter negotiations when Iger decided to walk away from the deal. However, Iger did not mention a specific number when talking about the number of fake accounts.

As per a Reuters report, Iger — former CEO of Disney — revealed that the company was in talks with Twitter to purchase the social media platform in 2016. Without mentioning a specific number, he suggested that “a substantial portion” of Twitter users “were not real.”

Twitter has maintained its claim that less than 5 percent of “monetisable” Twitter users are bot or spam accounts. The social media company is currently embroiled in a legal battle with Elon Musk who pulled out of a $44 billion (roughly Rs. 3.5 lakh crore) takeover deal.

Musk and Twitter are set to go for a five-day trial, which will take place in October.

Notably, Iger had mentioned in his memoir “The Ride of a Lifetime” that he had decided to not go ahead with the Twitter takeover deal in 2016 due to concerns about the “nastiness” of the discourse on the social media platform.


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