'Throttling' Angers Netflix Heavy
Renters
San Francisco Chronicle
By MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Business Writer
Friday, February 10, 2006
(02-10) 11:24 PST San Francisco (AP) -- Manuel Villanueva
realizes he has been getting a pretty good deal since he signed
up for Netflix Inc.'s online DVD rental service 2 1/2 years
ago, but he still feels shortchanged. That's because the $17.99
monthly fee that he pays to rent up to three DVDs at a time
would amount to an even bigger bargain if the company didn't
penalize him for returning his movies so quickly.
Netflix typically sends about 13 movies per month to Villanueva's
home in Warren, Mich. — down from the 18 to 22 DVDs he
once received before the company's automated system identified
him as a heavy renter and began delaying his shipments to protect
its profits.
The same Netflix formula also shoves Villanueva to the back
of the line for the most-wanted DVDs, so the service can send
those popular flicks to new subscribers and infrequent renters.
The little-known practice, called "throttling" by
critics, means Netflix customers who pay the same price for
the same service are often treated differently, depending on
their rental patterns.
"I wouldn't have a problem with it if they didn't advertise
`unlimited rentals,'" Villanueva said. "The fact
is that they go out of their way to make sure you don't go
over whatever secret limit they have set up for your account."
Los Gatos, Calif.-based Netflix didn't publicly acknowledge
it differentiates among customers until revising its "terms
of use" in January 2005 — four months after a San
Francisco subscriber filed a class-action lawsuit alleging
that the company had deceptively promised one-day delivery
of most DVDs.
"In determining priority for shipping and inventory allocation,
we give priority to those members who receive the fewest DVDs
through our service," Netflix's revised policy now reads.
The statement specifically warns that heavy renters are more
likely to encounter shipping delays and less likely to immediately
be sent their top choices.
Few customers have complained about this "fairness algorithm," according
to Netflix CEO Reed Hastings.
"We have unbelievably high customer satisfaction ratings," Hastings
said during a recent interview. "Most of our customers
feel like Netflix is an incredible value."
The service's rapid growth supports his thesis. Netflix added
nearly 1.6 million customers last year, giving it 4.2 million
subscribers through December. During the final three months
of 2005, just 4 percent of its customers canceled the service,
the lowest rate in the company's six-year history.
After collecting consumer opinions about the Web's 40 largest
retailers last year, Ann Arbor, Mich., research firm ForeSeeResults
rated Netflix as "the cream of the crop in customer satisfaction."
Once considered a passing fancy, Netflix has changed the way
many households rent movies and spawned several copycats, including
a mail service from Blockbuster Inc.
Netflix's most popular rental plan lets subscribers check
out up to three DVDs at a time for $17.99 per month. After
watching a movie, customers return the DVD in a postage-paid
envelope. Netflix then sends out the next available DVD on
the customer's online wish list.
Because everyone pays a flat fee, Netflix makes more money
from customers who only watch four or five DVDs per month.
Customers who quickly return their movies in order to get more
erode the company's profit margin because each DVD sent out
and returned costs 78 cents in postage alone.
Although Netflix consistently promoted its service as the
DVD equivalent of an all-you-can eat smorgasbord, some heavy
renters began to suspect they were being treated differently
two or three years ago.
To prove the point, one customer even set up a Web site to
show that the service listed different wait times for DVDs
requested by subscribers living in the same household.
Netflix's throttling techniques have also prompted incensed
customers to share their outrage in online forums such as .
"Netflix isn't well within its rights to throttle users," complained
a customer identified as "annoyed" in a posting on
the site. "They say unlimited rentals. They are liars."
Hastings said the company has no specified limit on rentals,
but "`unlimited' doesn't mean you should expect to get
10,000 a month."
In its terms of use, Netflix says most subscribers check out
two to 11 DVDs per month.
Management has previously acknowledged to analysts that it
risks losing money on a relatively small percentage of frequent
renters. The risk has increased since Netflix reduced the price
of its most popular subscription plan by $4 per month in 2004
and the U.S. Postal Service recently raised first-class mailing
costs by 2 cents.
Netflix's approach has paid off so far. The company has been
profitable in each of the past three years, a trend its management
expects to continue in 2006 with projected earnings of at least
$29 million on revenue of $960 million. Netflix's stock price
has more than tripled since its 2002 initial public offering.
A September 2004 lawsuit cast a spotlight on the throttling
issue. The complaint, filed by Frank Chavez on behalf of all
Netflix subscribers before Jan. 15, 2005, said the company
had developed a sophisticated formula to slow down DVD deliveries
to frequent renters and ensure quicker shipments of the most
popular movies to its infrequent — and most profitable — renters
to keep them happy.
Netflix denied the allegations, but eventually revised its
terms of use to acknowledge its different treatment of frequent
renters.
Without acknowledging wrongdoing, the company agreed to provide
a one-month rental upgrade and pay Chavez's attorneys $2.5
million, but the settlement sparked protests that prompted
the two sides to reconsider. A hearing on a revised settlement
proposal is scheduled for Feb. 22 in San Francisco Superior
Court.
Netflix subscribers such as Nathaniel Irons didn't believe
the company was purposely delaying some DVD shipments until
he read the revised terms of use.
Irons, 28, of Seattle, has no plans to cancel his service
because he figures he is still getting a good value from the
eight movies he typically receives each month.
"My own personal experience has not been bad," he
said, "but (the throttling) is certainly annoying when
it happens."
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