Netflix customers' ENTIRE movie rental history to be shared with Facebook... including all your guilty pleasures

By James Nye

|


Netflix users will soon be able to share every film they have watched with their Facebook friends - allowing the social networking giant even more lucrative information on its users' leisure time.

Up until now the Video Privacy Protection Act prohibited Netflix and other streaming services such as Hulu from sharing their customers' history or allowing them to post it themselves.

However, Congress has now passed a bill to the 1988 act that allows users to opt in or out of forthcoming Facebook 'social sharing' features, which let advertisers reach customers who watch movies on the streaming sites but do not 'like' it on those sites.

Scroll down for video

Malfunction: Families across the United States were forced to rely on sources of entertainment other than holiday movies after Netflix's video streaming service crashed on Christmas eve

Malfunction: Families across the United States were forced to rely on sources of entertainment other than holiday movies after Netflix's video streaming service crashed on Christmas eve

The Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA) previously prevented these actions by stating in law that a person's movie rental history cannot be disclosed without written consent - the law was enacted after supreme court hopeful Robert Bork's rental history was leaked to Washington D.C.'s City Paper in 1987.

While this means that anyone's obsession with violent Honk Kong martial arts movies can not be shared among large internet corporations like Facebook, Netflix will give its customers the opportunity to turn off the sharing feature.

'We are pleased that the Senate moved so quickly after the House,' a Netflix spokesperson told TPM in a statement.

 

'We plan to introduce social features for our US members in 2013, after the president signs it.'

Netflix has been attempting to allow its users to link their Netflix and Facebook accounts since 2011 to allow friends to share online the movies they have watched.

Users in Canada and Latin America have had the ability to do this since 2011, but Netflix has been prevented by the VPPA from doing this in the United States, where the majority of its 20 million customers are based.

Fade to gray: Zuckerberg has revealed he owns as many as 20 identical gray t-shirts which he wears all the time
Fade to gray: Zuckerberg has revealed he owns as many as 20 identical gray t-shirts which he wears all the time

Fade to gray: Zuckerberg owns as many as 20 identical gray t-shirts which he wears all the time

In the past, Facebook has banned mothers from posting photos of themselves breastfeeding their children

Strict: In the past, Facebook has banned mothers from posting photos of themselves breastfeeding their children

Hulu, a competitor of Netflix, has been involved in a battle in the Californian courts since 2011 for its decision to allow Facebook integration - and it is still fighting.

The new bill forces companies to obtain 'informed, written consent,' for sharing their information (though this can also be done through Internet forms), and also allows customers to withdraw consent from sharing their viewed video records or recommendations at any time, entirely or 'case-by-case,' that is video-by-video.

However, media commentators have questioned who will allow their viewing habits to be shared, or if they will even begin to 'like' titles allowing others to see what they enjoy to watch.

They question whether people will want others to know their favourite Harry Potter film, or if indeed they even watch Harry Potter, especially if this goes contrary to what they have said in public.

VIDEO: Sen Franken introduces Video Protection Act of 2011:  

Play Video
Loading video...
 

The comments below have not been moderated.

Don't have a facebook account. Simple.

Click to rate     Rating   (0)

Don't have a facebook account. Simple.

Click to rate     Rating   (0)

another reason why I don't have netflix or fb!

Click to rate     Rating   2

I think my new years resolution is to delete Facebook!!

Click to rate     Rating   7

Use a separate email address for Facebook so it can't do it automatically, and never log in to other sites using Facebook. Nothing wrong with sharing what films you want, so long as it's your choice to share it!

Click to rate     Rating   1

The problem with opting OUT is that many people won't be notified sufficiently that they have the right to opt out of social network sharing of their information. People should be able to opt IN if they want to be sold up the river to marketers, not OUT. This system is backward, and for good reason. It's designed to willfully and knowingly deceive the consumer, no matter what country they live in! Same scam. Your personal data has a price tag. Make no mistake.

Click to rate     Rating   9

Zuckerberg is the antichrist

Click to rate     Rating   16

No Facebook for me.

Click to rate     Rating   15

FaceB to me is like being an Egyptian back in the day but you didn't have to work on the pyramids if you didn't want to. As soon as you sign up, out come the whips. No Thank You.

Click to rate     Rating   18

Netflix in the uk already shares the films you watch, unless you click a box saying you don't want to. I know there is bound to be at least one of these comments, but why is this on the main page? This IS a british news site and articles such as this, clearly written for and by americans just confuse me. I have no objection to articles about other going-ons though, but things like these on a uk website should stay on the usa page.

Click to rate     Rating   2

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

You have 1000 characters left.
Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.
For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.
Terms