After 25 Years, Netflix Ends DVD Rentals

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After 25 Years, Netflix Ends DVD Rentals​

As users move to online streaming, the company will mail its last disc in September

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Packages of DVDs await shipment at the Netflix headquarters in San Jose, California, in 2002.

In a bygone epoch of Blockbuster, the red-and-white envelopes that carried Netflix DVDs to homes around America were instantly recognizable. The company has shipped over 5.2 billion discs since its inception in 1998.

But now, after 25 years, Netflix has announced that the DVD-by-mail service will end on September 29, 2023. Executives cited decreasing interest as a vast majority of their users have moved to online streaming.

“Our goal has always been to provide the best service for our members, but as the business continues to shrink that’s going to become increasingly difficult,” says Ted Sarandos, co-CEO of Netflix, in a statement.

The announcement comes at a troubling time for the streaming service, which in recent years has been embroiled in controversies ranging from staff walkouts over content choices to changes to its password-sharing policy.

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Netflix has more than 200 million streaming subscribers around the world.


According to Nicole Sperling of the New York Times, a slower than predicted quarter of growth had “analysts concerned that [Netflix] has not yet rebounded from its correction last year,” when it lost 200,000 subscribers.

Last weekend, the streaming service met with backlash across social media platforms when a much-anticipated live event, a reunion for its reality show “Love Is Blind,” failed to take place as scheduled.

“We didn’t meet the standard that we expect of ourselves to serve our members,” Greg Peters, the company’s other co-CEO, tells the Times.

But even though recent troubles have exacerbated the need for Netflix to cut costs, the end of the DVD.com era was a long time coming. This year had been suggested as a sunset date for the program since as early as 2018, reported Michael Liedtke of the Associated Press (AP) last fall.

Even from its inception, Netflix’s founders say they knew that DVDs would decline before long. The trick was to catch the wave and ride it until it crashed.

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The Netflix booth at the San Diego Comic-Con International in 2017

“It was planned obsolescence, but our bet was that it would take longer for it to happen than most people thought at the time,” Marc Randolph, Netflix’s first CEO, told the AP.

Who are the die-hard fans still paying for and using the DVD-by-mail service? Why do they do it? Some customers argue that the excitement of receiving their movies in the mail cannot be replicated digitally.

“When you open your mailbox, it’s still something you actually want instead of just bills,” Amanda Konkle, who has been subscribing to Netflix’s DVD-by-mail service since 2005, told the AP.

Konkle teaches film studies at Georgia Southern University, and she said that the DVD service helped her discover films that she went on to use in the classroom. Still, many fans of the service tell the AP that the quality of the discs and the number of selections available in recent years have plummeted. Titles, when available, were arriving late, scratched or both.

Randolph acknowledges the need for the change but laments the loss of a central part of Netflix’s identity. “Netflix’s DVD business was part-and-parcel of who Netflix was and still is,” he tells the AP. “It’s embedded in the company’s DNA.”
 
Wait they still mailed out DVDs? I thought they ended that shit years ago. Likewise, people in CURRENT YEAR still use Netflix to rent DVDS?

Honestly I thought at this point everyone and their great grandmothers had just swapped over to digital and paid the monthly subscription fee for Netflix or whatever other streaming service they wanted to use.
 
Bet Blockbuster is thinking real hard about a comeback right now.

Who are the die-hard fans still paying for and using the DVD-by-mail service? Why do they do it? Some customers argue that the excitement of receiving their movies in the mail cannot be replicated digitally.
Or the people who saw all the streaming companies censoring old media for no reason other than "twattter might come type at me!" they realized the only way to get the closest to unedited versions is in the physical DVDs (if the high digital seas fails them that is). It's also the same reason people buy CDs and Vinyls aside from just wanting them obviously.
 
Biggest revelation from this article is that Netflix still does DVD rentals lmao

Bet Blockbuster is thinking real hard about a comeback right now.


Or the people who saw all the streaming companies censoring old media for no reason other than "twattter might come type at me!" they realized the only way to get the closest to unedited versions is in the physical DVDs (if the high digital seas fails them that is). It's also the same reason people buy CDs and Vinyls aside from just wanting them obviously.
Yeah but rentals? What you said makes sense for buying DVDs, not renting them.
 
We had a Netflix DVD rental kiosk outside the store for a couple years and then it just disappeared. I've had customers ask me about it, to which I told them I didn't know.

Guess I do now.

Edit: Never mind, it was a Redbox. I get those two mixed up for some reason.
 
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Apparently you have never heard of DVD ripping software...
It's been a while since I've wanted to do it, but I recall disc ripping being a normally trivial matter that rental firms like Netflix (formerly) intentionally made more difficult as a form of DRM. I tried ripping a rental of Scott Pilgrim vs. The World-- the video files came out garbled.
 
I'd say "end of an era" but as evident by the posts here, literally no one knew they still had a DVD rental service going on in the backburner, and I bet the only reason they decided to close it was because some employee informed a higherup that "oh yeah, we still have that DVD Service going on, we should probably do something about that."
 
Wait they still mailed out DVDs? I thought they ended that shit years ago. Likewise, people in CURRENT YEAR still use Netflix to rent DVDS?

Honestly I thought at this point everyone and their great grandmothers had just swapped over to digital and paid the monthly subscription fee for Netflix or whatever other streaming service they wanted to use.
There are a lot of movies not on stream you can rent as a DVD. My brother still uses it since he refuses to learn how to torrent
 
I dropped Netflix, physical and streaming, several years when they stopped making good streaming content and went hard into Nigger&Trannyshines + Wipipo = bad. They weren't making content I cared for, so I stopped supporting them with my wallet.

I was doing 2 DVDs a month up until... 2017ish when I realized I gave zero fucks about any movie coming out because they were all nigger/tranny/broad reboots with no originality.
AMA.

Wait they still mailed out DVDs? I thought they ended that shit years ago. Likewise, people in CURRENT YEAR still use Netflix to rent DVDS?

Honestly I thought at this point everyone and their great grandmothers had just swapped over to digital and paid the monthly subscription fee for Netflix or whatever other streaming service they wanted to use.
You can't get everything on streaming. If you live in a less-populated area of the country and travel frequently for work, you may find yourself in a place with shit internet. You can either be at the mercy of HBO or BYOM.
Yes, torrents are a thing.

I'd say "end of an era" but as evident by the posts here, literally no one knew they still had a DVD rental service going on in the backburner, and I bet the only reason they decided to close it was because some employee informed a higherup that "oh yeah, we still have that DVD Service going on, we should probably do something about that."
Source: Friend who was doing DVDs with them until only a couple months ago.
The have been slowly killing their DVD mail service for years. Their selection has been shrinking, and it was hard to get current Movies when previously latest-run movies were always available.

You used be to able to get some really niche & obscure shit on netflix. Deep-tracks Indy horror, foreign stuff, old TV movies & TV shows that the internet forgot. If you went off the beaten path there was some really unique stuff to find. I'd rather watch something like Edison Force or Lo than watch another Capeshit movie.

My friends and I used to do "One-Star Watch Parties" where we'd find the lowest-ranked movies we could that didn't look completely unwatchable and watch them with pizza and booze. There were a couple of movies that looked to be some Film School's graduating class project - a few of them were actually not bad despite their budgets.

Huh, apparently Gamefly still exists too. Weird.
Gamefly has actually branched out into DVD rentals. Aforementioned friend dropped Netflix for Gamefly's movie rental add-on because they actually had the latest releases.

There are a lot of movies not on stream you can rent as a DVD. My brother still uses it since he refuses to learn how to torrent
I know how to torrent, I'm just lazy because the number of movies I actually care to see more than once is small. When there were movies I gave a shit about watching, not trying to deal with bad torrents was worth $15 of my time.

Oh well, Yo Ho Ho back to the high seas.
 
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