Netflix is going to let DVD subscribers keep unreturned discs for free
Netflix is going to let DVD subscribers keep unreturned discs for free
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Netflix won’t charge DVD.com customers for any discs they still have after September 29th, the company announced from its DVD.com account on X on Monday.
That generous offer, combined with Netflix’s recent announcement that it may send customers as many as 10 extra discs from their queues, means that some people might end up with a bunch of disc copies of movies, courtesy of Netflix.
DVD.com customers will need to visit a special link on DVD.com by August 29th to apply for the promotional offer.
Netflix will then send up to 10 random discs based on the movies in the subscriber’s queue.
Netflix first announced its plans to sunset its DVD subscription service in April, marking an end to the DVD shipping business that originally launched the company that’s since become a streaming giant.
It’s going to ship out the last round of discs on September 29th.
The original article contains 147 words, the summary contains 147 words. Saved 0%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Didn’t need to leave my app 😁
Although that short article is a bit of a wasted chatgpt API call for Rikudou who covers its cost 🥲
Can people sign up to get some? My gut says that it’s existing customers only, but I’d like to have some DRM free local copies if I can.
Then again, it’s easy enough to just download…
That would require distribution work. This way, the DVDs go to someone who actually wanted to watch them, rather than a landfill. It’s the cheapest option that isn’t straight up evil.
And nothing is stopping anyone with one of these from now donating them to a local library, should they not want the DVD to keep.
It is indirectly linked from the article via a “the service formerly known as Twitter” link.
There is lots of content that isn’t licensed for streaming, and is out-of-print on DVD. Its entirely possible that Netflix DVD rental may be the ONLY place to get certain titles. Depending on what you had out, this may be quite a boon for those that have rare titles in hand.
Something like the Blu Ray of Kevin Smith’s 1999 movie “Dogma” could cost you $175 to buy
Something like the Blu Ray of Kevin Smith’s 1999 movie “Dogma” could cost you $150 to buy
…but why?
Yep it sucks because I think it’s Kevin Smith’s best work but I do respect him for refusing to buy the rights back or arrange for a deal for streaming rights because it would be giving Bob and Harvey Weinstein money.
For anyone unaware, the film had a complicated release because there was a lot of controversy surrounding Dogma, particularly from the Catholic League, who were pissy about being made fun of. So Disney, who owned Miramax at the time, allowed Bob and Harvey Weinstein to buy the movie themselves. So they personally own Dogma.
Well, DVDs are cheaper. Especially used DVDs. Dogma on DVD in state “Very Good” goes for around £2-3 on amazon.co.uk.
Honorable mention: You can stream it on himovies.sx for free. You can also use Inspector’s network tab on Firefox to get the .m3u8 stream and pass it to youtube-dl. For true experience, burn it to DVD.
Edit: You can also get it on VHS tape for £3 apparently.
Well, DVDs are cheaper. Especially used DVDs. Dogma on DVD in state “Very Good” goes for around £2-3 on amazon.co.uk.
Those are PAL and Region 2 DVDs. So they won’t work in regular US DVD players. Welcome to the wonderful world of regional distribution contracts.
I checked the US Amazon, Dogma DVD is mostly Region 2 imports… and used Region 1 discs are like $15. Oh, and amazon.co.uk has Region 1 Imported discs for £3 as well. But shipping cost will make the price about the same I guess.
Or how about a region-free South Korea version?
spin zone
You cheeky monkey
In the hands of Netflix after they stop dvd service? Yes. In the hands of people who want the DVDs? No.
They either have to give them away or throw them away. May as well give them away.
The fact that we’re even still using fucking dvds is baffling.
How much room is there on this planet to allow everyone to have everything and anything they want.
It’s psychotic and it’s why the upcoming decades are going to be especially rough
Some places are very remote and have bad internet. Some people like the special features on DVD. There are movies only available on DVD that aren’t streaming or on Blu-Rays. Some DVDs contain the original edits or music recordings that have since been changed.
Lot’s of reasons some people still use DVDs.
Oh yeah I’m not blaming the consumer (this time!) but the producers themselves.
All of that content could be provided digitally if we only took internet architecture and that sort of stuff seriously.
We could eliminate a lot of the need for physicality if we improved digital infra