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Apple’s new ad highlights the tech giant’s emphasis on privacy

One thing Apple nearly always does well are its clever advertisements.

The tech giant’s latest ad once again shines a light on its emphasis on privacy and stopping third-party companies and data brokers from selling your personal information.

In the roughly minute and a half advertisement, iPhone user Ellie uncovers a world of data brokers and companies buying and selling the information located on her smartphone, including her emails, drugstore purchases, browsing history and even her contact information depicted through the sale of her grandmother (which is kind of weird).

As you likely already guessed, Ellie uses Apple’s various privacy-focused features like App Tracking Transparency and Mail Privacy Protection to prevent the sale of her data.

As far as ads go, this one is pretty amusing and also does a decent job of highlighting Apple’s emphasis on privacy, something Google spent a significant amount of its recent I/O 2022 presentation discussing.

Image credit: Apple

Source: Apple (YouTube)

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Netflix planning to launch ads, password sharing crackdown by end of 2022: report

Netflix is planning to launch a lower-cost, ad-supported membership option and begin cracking down on password sharing by the end of the year.

In a note to employees that was communicated to The New York Times, the streaming giant indicated that the tier would be introduced in the last three months of 2022. This would be earlier than the rough “over the next year or two” period that Netflix CEO Reed Hastings had floated around last month.

The note acknowledged as much, stating “Yes, it’s fast and ambitious and it will require some trade-offs.” It’s unclear exactly what those “trade-offs” will be, however.

Until as recently as March, Netflix has historically said it’s not interested in bringing ads to its platform. However, its stance changed amid confirmation that it actually lost 200,000 subscribers in Q1 2022 — its first quarterly drop in over 10 years. Further, the company is expecting to shed another two million subscribers in the second quarter. All of this comes amid an increasingly saturated streaming market, which includes relatively new players like Disney+, Apple TV+ and the U.S.-only HBO Max.

Less clear, however, is what’s happening with the password sharing crackdown. The company has previously confirmed plans to crack down on password sharing, as the company claims that around 100 million households are doing so instead of paying for their own memberships. However, it’s so far only rolled out a test of a password sharing paywall in three countries: Chile, Costa Rica and Peru, so it’s unclear how it might work when it officially launches.

The New York Times‘ report didn’t provide any further details, simply noting that Netflix is “planning to begin cracking down on password sharing among its subscriber base around the same time.” Therefore, this leaves some room as to when and how Netflix will crack down on this, specifically.

Source: The New York Times

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Netflix eying ad-supported tier, password sharing paywall expansion

Netflix says it’s looking into adding a lower cost, ad-supported subscription tier.

Previously, Netflix has been non-committal about such an offering, despite some analysts suggesting that the company do so. In a recent earnings call, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings admitted that going the ad route would give consumers more options.

“Those who have followed Netflix know that I’ve been against the complexity of advertising and a big fan of the simplicity of subscription,” said Hastings. “But as much as I’m a fan of that, I’m a bigger fan of consumer choice […] Allowing consumers who would like to have lower price and are advertising tolerant get what they want makes a lot of sense.”

Other major streamers have already done this. In the U.S., both HBO Max and Hulu offer lower-cost, ad-supported tiers, while Disney+ will do the same in the U.S. later this year and internationally in 2023. For Netflix, a cheaper alternative could help growth, following the company’s recent news that it lost 200,000 subscribers — its first quarterly decrease in more than 10 years — in Q1 2022. The company is projecting a further loss of two million subscribers in the second quarter.

“Our revenue growth has slowed considerably,” wrote Netflix in an April 19th letter to shareholders. “Streaming is winning over linear, as we predicted, and Netflix titles are very popular globally. However, our relatively high household penetration — when including the large number of households sharing accounts — combined with competition, is creating revenue growth headwinds.”

Netflix attributed the subscriber drop to the suspension of its business in Russia amid global sanctions against the country over its invasion of Ukraine. A cheaper Netflix tier would balance out its recently enacted price increase — the second in under two years.

However, don’t expect an ad-enabled option from Netflix anytime soon. According to Hastings, specific details on how this will work, including pricing, will be hashed out “over the next year or two.” He did note, though, that the company isn’t viewing ads as a “short-term fix” to subscriber growth.

Another strategy the company is publicly eyeing is cracking down on password sharing. While this practice has actually been against Netflix’s terms of service, the company nonetheless hasn’t prevented anyone from doing so. However, the company recently unveiled the testing of a (roughly $3 to 4 CAD) paywall on password sharing in Chile, Costa Rica and Peru.

While the streamer originally said it’s waiting to gather data from these initial tests before making any decisions on expanding them globally, Hastings has now suggested this will likely happen. In its Q1 2022 earnings release, Netflix estimated that in addition to its 222 million paying subscribers, more than 100 million additional households are sharing passwords, including 30 million in the U.S. and Canada.

“Those are over 100 million households already are choosing to view Netflix,” said Hastings. “We’ve just got to get paid at some degree for them.”

It’s unclear when Netflix may potentially introduce the password-sharing paywall in other countries.

Via: Business Insider

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Mobile Syrup

Microsoft is testing banner ads for File Explorer in Windows 11

Microsoft says that ads appearing in Windows 11’s File Explorer were a mistake and “not intended to be published externally” after a Windows Insider tweeted about them.

Insider MVP Florian Beaubois shared a picture of a banner ad in File Explorer on Twitter, noting — aptly — that “people will go mad” if Microsoft adds ads to File Explorer.

In a statement to The Verge, senior program manager for Windows Brandon LeBlanc explained the ad was “an experimental banner that was not intended to be published externally and was turned off.”

Unfortunately, saying “we didn’t mean for this to happen” doesn’t mean Microsoft will never put ads in File Explorer. Plus, it’s clear now that Microsoft can run ads in File Explorer if it wanted to.

Which, it does. The company has a track record of putting ads into Windows, although typically for its own services (an ad is an ad, however). The Verge points out that Microsoft experimented with a banner ad in the Windows 10 File Explorer for promoting OneDrive back in 2017.

The company also put ads into the Windows 10 lock screen, the Start menu, and has added all kinds of pop-ups and other intrusive, ad-like things to push its Edge browser on users.

All this is to say, while Microsoft may not be putting ads into File Explorer right now, it can and probably will.

Source: Florian Beaubois (Twitter) Via: The Verge

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Reminder: Super Bowl LVI will not feature U.S. ads in Canada

The passage of time has been hard to track amid the COVID-19 pandemic, so you’d be forgiven for forgetting about the whole “Super Bowl ads” situation in Canada.

You know, the one where Canadians called for the big-budget, celebrity-filled American ads for which the big game is known?

Well, as a reminder: following a December 2019 ruling, American ads are still not permitted to run during Canadian Super Bowl broadcasts. That applies to this year’s Super Bowl LVI, which kicks off on Sunday, February 13th at 6:30pm ET. The National Football Conference (NFC) champion Los Angeles Rams and the American Football Conference (AFC) champion Cincinnati Bengals are facing off.

This ruling was made after Bell argued that it would lose millions in ad revenue if U.S. ads were played instead. This was also controversial, as many football fans have argued that the U.S. ads are an integral part of the Super Bowl experience.

Therefore, Canadians will need to find other ways to watch the ads, which feature everyone from Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost to Lindsay Lohan and Guy Fieri. At the very least, the usual prominent movie and TV show trailers — including Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings show — should be released online promptly for easy viewing.

For more information on where to watch the Super Bowl in Canada, click here.

Image: Shutterstock

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it looks like Samsung finally stopped showing ads in its Galaxy phone apps

Samsung promised to stop showing ads on its One UI apps in the summer and, surprisingly, the company actually followed through.

According to reports from both The Verge and 9to5Google, ads no longer show up in the Samsung Weather, Pay or Health apps. I asked MobileSyrup’s resident Samsung user, Dean Daley, about the status of ads on his Samsung phone, but he said he never really saw them to begin with.

It’s great to see Samsung go through with the change. Ads in pre-installed apps were particularly frustrating, especially on Samsung’s most expensive, premium flagship phone. The company received a lot of flack for doing it.

If you’ve got a Samsung phone, it’s worth noting you may have to force-close an app to get it to stop showing ads.

Although Samsung has received the most flack, it’s not the only company that displays ads in software on its devices. For example, Apple regularly advertises its own services in the Settings app, although people seem less bothered by that.

Either way, no apps in Samsung apps is a win.

Source: The Verge, 9to5Google