The video-streaming site reintroduces a feature letting households
individualize their viewing habits on the site, so parents don't get
recommendations for "Snow White" and kids don't get suggestions to watch
"Se7en."
Netflix revives the option of keeping users' viewing habits separate on the same account, called profiles.
Netflix launched a feature on Thursday to keep your viewing persona
separate from your sports-doc-streaming husband, your romcom-loving
girlfriend, your "My Little Pony" fan of a daughter, or your
zombie-obsessed brother.
If you're feeling a sense of deja vu, Netflix once had an identical
feature, and for some longtime subscribers, it still does in a way. For
years, subscribers could separate their DVD-rental queues by household
user. Netflix planned the end of profiles in 2008, much to the chagrin of some subscribers.
At the time, the company was still predominantly a DVD service, having
launched its streaming venture just the previous year, and profiles
never made it over to the streaming side of the site. Though it reversed
its decision to eliminate profiles because of the outcry, Netflix
quietly killed the earlier profiles feature for new customers in 2010.
Like its predecessor, the new profiles allows users to create separate
identities for different members on the same account. For all Netflix's
devotion to its recommendation algorithms -- it once held a contest with
a $1 million prize to any person or team who could improve its
predictive power by a certain amount -- those recommendations can be
undermined by people in the same household having divergent tastes.
And most people choose what they watch based on what Netflix recommends.
Last month, the company said more than three-quarters of the hours
streamed come from personalized suggestions generated by its algorithms.
The aim of the newly revised profiles is to sharpen the effect of the
recommendations Netflix makes. That matters to Netflix because the
better it recommends movies, the more likely people are to watch them.
And "the more people watch, the more they retain" the service, Chief
Executive Reed Hastings said last year.
"With a feature like profiles where consumers invest a lot, you can't
take it away," he said. "We didn't want to introduce something that we
might have to change or take away."
Netflix designed profiles to be simple, eschewing ideas like a password
protection. It also said the idea wasn't related to uncovering
accounting sharing, when people cooperatively pool an account even if
they don't live in the same household.
"Our intent is to make the family experience great, we've not been too
worried with the phenomenon of account sharing," Hunt said.
The feature, which allows up to five profiles, is rolling out to Netflix
globally on Thursday and will be available to all member within two
weeks.
New members can set up profiles while signing up for Netflix, and
existing members can create additional profiles at any time on the
Netflix Web site or
PlayStation 3. Profiles are accessible on most devices that play Netflix, including the Web site, PS3,
Xbox 360 and iOS devices like iPhone and
Apple TV, as well as most smart TVs. Netflix will be adding more devices in the coming months.

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