UPDATE: March 21, 2020, 3:24 p.m. EDT Disney+ has joined the fray, saying it will throttle European bandwidth by 25 percent for 30 days after its March 24 launch, per Deadline. Its French launch has also been delayed until April 7.
Original story:
Movie and TV aficionados should get used to reduced image quality on their favorite streaming service, at least for a little while.
Amazon and YouTube both confirmedon Friday that they would be reducing video stream quality in the EU to ensure there aren’t bandwidth issues during the coronavirus pandemic.
“We are making a commitment to temporarily switch all traffic in the EU to standard definition by default,” said a YouTube spokesperson in a statement.
Both of these companies join Netflix, which announced yesterday that it would be cutting quality in the EU as well. As a giant in the streaming video industry and a major source of internet traffic around the globe, Netflix committedto cutting its bandwidth by 25 percent. The company said it was reducing video bitrates, thus lowering streaming quality, to do this.
“We support the need for careful management of telecom services to ensure they can handle the increased internet demand, with so many people now at home full-time due to Covid-19,” said an Amazon spokesperson in a statement. “Prime Video is working with local authorities and internet service providers where needed to help mitigate any network congestion, including in Europe, where we’ve already begun the effort to reduce streaming bitrates while maintaining a quality streaming experience for our customers.”
All three streaming services are making these changes immediately in the EU following a requestfrom European Commissioner for Internal Market and Services Thierry Breton. However, it should be noted that Amazon’s statement makes it clear that the company is ready to reduce quality in other regions around the world should the need arise.
Video streaming platforms such as YouTube, Amazon’s Prime Video, and Netflix have become a major source of entertainment as people around the world hunker down in their homes in order to practice social distancing and contain the spread of the virus. Nielsen estimatesthat the crisis “can lead to almost a 60 percent increase in the amount of content we watch in some cases and potentially more depending on the reasons.”
A previous study conductedin 2018 found that Netflix alone accounted for 15 percent of all internet traffic worldwide.
Netflix announcedat the beginning of the year that it has more than 167 million subscribers around the world. Last month, Amazon sharedthat it had more than 150 million global Prime subscribers. Each Prime subscription comes with the Prime Video service. YouTube boastsmore than 2 billion logged in users per month, who watch more than a billion hours of video each day.
With streaming services already taking up so much bandwidth, the fear that the increase in usage could affect the internet from running smoothly is certainly well founded. Amazon, YouTube, and Netflix are hoping to alleviate those worries with this action.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Netflix, Disney+, YouTube throttle Europe's streaming due to coronavirus-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
64533
浏览
59
获赞
1
Twitter is developing a new misinfo moderation tool called Birdwatch
The President of the United States is in the hospital with COVID-19 — and no one can seem to aMark Hamill's tribute to Carrie Fisher will make you cry all over again
It's been exactly one year since the legend Carrie Fisher left us, and her on-screen brother Mark HaNigella Lawson says women of her generation were taught they shouldn't make men feel rejected
Nigella Lawson has praised the fact that younger generations of women have been brought up to "standSomeone reportedly hacked an Asics store screen to display porn for 9 hours
If you've ever worked at a store that keeps TV screens running when the store is closed, then you'vePeloton Wife returns in ad for Ryan Reynolds' Aviation Gin
Try explaining any of this to your grandkids in 50 years.In recent days, the internet started workinBehold! the gruesome reality of Trump's hair is finally known.
We're not sure what we were doing last Friday, but now we know what we missed: the horrifying truthMoonPie Twitter has evolved to making dad jokes
The MoonPie Twitter account, known for being one of the most absurd brands on Twitter, is at it agaiPeople are tweeting the creepiest things they've heard kids say and it's a full
It's common knowledge that clowns, scarecrows, and ventriloquist dummies are all creepy, but did youNo Mercy: SEC charges rapper T.I. over cryptocurrency scam
It would seem T.I. left a paper trail. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday announTide's Twitter account responds to people who say they ate Tide Pods
Our sympathies are with the Tide social media manager.As teens participate, pretend to participate,OnePlus 7T is coming on Sept. 26, probably in more than one flavor
It's official: OnePlus is launching its next flagship, the OnePlus 7T, on Sept. 26. There will be aTwitter bans 'Imposter Buster' that identified fake accounts of trolls
Twitter's number one goal in 2017 was curbing abuse and cracking down on hate speech. But when one iTrump tweeted a photo of Nancy Pelosi to insult her, and it backfired spectacularly
Trump's latest attempt to dunk on Nancy Pelosi really didn't work out. Democratic congressional leadPhiladelphia goes wild after the Eagles make it to the Super Bowl
The last time the Philadelphia Eagles were in the Super Bowl, we only just started using MySpace andPlease enjoy these photos of an Olympic coach knitting on the slopes
When the stakes are high, this Finnish Olympic snowboarding coach stays cool with a little light, sl