Netflix & Facebook integration held up by Congress
U.S.-based Netflix subscribers wont be able to share their viewing habits with their Facebook friends any time soon, it reported today. In its Q2 letter to shareholders (PDF), the video subscription service revealed that it will only launch the feature, which has been reportedly in the works for some time, in Canada and South America this year because of concerns over a U.S. privacy law.
The Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA) makes it impossible for a company to disclose personally identifiable video rental information to third parties unless the customer opts into such data transfer in writing. The law was passed in 1998 after a video rental store provided a Washington-based newspaper with information about the videos a local judge was renting.
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings and CFO David Wells said in their letter to shareholders today that under the law it is ambiguous when and how a user can give permission for his or her video viewing data to be shared. The continued saying that lawmakers have introduced a bill (HR2471) to clarify when and how a user can opt into these kinds of things, adding: Were hoping HR2471 passes, enabling us to offer our Facebook integration to our U.S. subscribers who desire it.
Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.
- A field guide to cloud computing: current trends, futureopportunities
- Infrastructure Q1: IaaS Comes Down to Earth; Big Data TakesFlight
- NewNet Q1: Content Farms and Niche Networks on theRise
Comments