Verizon: The latest threat to Netflix?
Verizon is planning its own streaming video service to challenge Reed Hastings and Co. Should Netflix be worried?
The battle for online eyes is about to intensify. Verizon Communications is planning to challenge CEO Reed Hastings' Netflix head-on with a standalone service allowing customers to stream movies and television shows onto their computers, according to a report from Reuters. The phone company is seeking prospective partnerships for the service, which could debut as soon as 2012 and would be available outside of its current FiOS cable markets. Should Netflix, coming off of a rocky year, be concerned?
Undoubtedly, yes: "Fresh competition would be bad news for Netflix," says Todd Wasserman at Mashable, which has seen a "reversal of its fortunes" since it announced a controversial price raise in July. Verizon's proposed service, with a potential market of 85 million households, would be priced competitively with Netflix and give Verizon a far greater reach than the 5 million FiOS subscribers it currently has.
"Verizon to Challenge Netflix With Streaming Service"
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Is anyone really surprised?: Well, "we're not entirely shocked by the move," says Terrence O'Brien at Engadget. Even though "details are scant" and "there's no telling when [the new service] might launch," you can be sure all of Verizon's competitors "will be watching closely…and we don't just mean Netflix." Cable and satellite providers like Time Warner are "already wary of the public embracing cord-cutting." When a fellow cable provider like Verizon is "encouraging the behavior," it definitely "sets off a lot of alarms."
"Verizon planning streaming video service, gets ready to take on Netflix"
Verizon or even Amazon? Please: "We fear HBO Go the most," Hastings tells The Street, dismissing the Verizon threat. HBO Go allows subscribers of the premium television network — which airs hits like Boardwalk Empire and a wealth of films — to access its content through their computers and mobile devices. Though HBO isn't competing with Netflix directly yet, "they can" if they want to. "HBO is becoming more like Netflix," he says, "and we are becoming like HBO."
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