HBO Max plans stricter enforcement on password sharing

Alfonso Maruccia

Posts: 2,570   +956
Staff
In brief: Once a commonly overlooked practice among video-on-demand users, password sharing has become a growing concern in the streaming industry. Major platforms are now implementing their own strategies to curb it, and HBO Max is no exception.

HBO Max is officially shifting gears in its effort to make password sharing a thing of the past. The Warner Bros.-owned streaming service (formerly known simply as "Max") will soon take a more aggressive stance against users accessing the platform with someone else's credentials, according to JB Perrette, president of global streaming and games at Warner Bros. Discovery. He confirmed the plan during a recent call with investors.

For years, many streaming viewers were able to watch their favorite shows and movies for free by using accounts paid for by friends or family. But like other major players in the streaming space, HBO Max has decided that enough is enough. Still, the company is opting for a phased rollout rather than an abrupt crackdown.

Warner Bros. initially took a gentler approach, prompting unauthorized users to register and pay for their own accounts. According to Perrette, this soft warning was easy to ignore. But the company now plans to ramp up enforcement in the coming months and years.

HBO Max has spent several months developing systems to distinguish between legitimate paying users and those accessing the service via shared passwords. Perrette said the testing phase went well and that the company is now confident in its ability to tell the difference.

Perrette did not specify exactly how HBO Max will enforce the new password-sharing rules. He said users will be prompted to "take action" rather than simply dismiss an on-screen warning, which likely means they'll be required to register for a new (paid) account in order to continue streaming. The "benefits" of this new strategy are expected to begin showing in the fourth quarter of 2025 and continue into 2026.

Warner Bros. Discovery Streaming added 3.4 million new subscribers during the second quarter, driven largely by international growth. HBO Max now boasts 125.7 million total subscribers and is clearly hoping to grow that number further through its more aggressive stance on password sharing.

The service is part of a broader industry shift that's transforming video streaming into something more reminiscent of traditional TV. Major platforms have begun showing ads to paying customers on lower-tier plans, blurring the line between streaming and conventional cable or broadcast television. Netflix and Disney+ began cracking down on password sharing well before HBO Max issued its warnings, making HBO's efforts part of a growing trend rather than an isolated move.

Permalink to story:

 
>bans accounts for password sharing because service is to expensive
>Noone resubscribes
It's a self correcting problem. At the very least, a self punishing problem. 90% of the password sharing I see is going over someone's house and someone logs into the persons Smart TV so we can watch something at their house and then the person just never logs out.
 
>bans accounts for password sharing because service is to expensive
>Noone resubscribes
It's a self correcting problem. At the very least, a self punishing problem. 90% of the password sharing I see is going over someone's house and someone logs into the persons Smart TV so we can watch something at their house and then the person just never logs out.
It worked for Netflix. Sub count rose dramatically after the sharing bans.
 
Netflix is(was) cheap and has(had) lots of content. HBO gets a winning show once a decade
Neither of those statements matter. By the time the password requirement was implemented, Netflix had already repeatedly jacked up prices and had lost much of its prime content to the multitude of other streaming services out there.
 
No service is worth it. Sure, each streaming service tends to get a good show or two here and there, but the constant climbing of prices and mostly lackluster content are the reasons people are constantly dropping subs and only renewing to binge for a month and drop again. There are zero incentives to maintain a constant subscription to any service.

HBO Max carries nothing that interests me and even if it did I'm not interested in paying $10 a month for ad littered content or $17 a month for ad free.

Netflix priced itself out of my wallet, not to mention their content has been sub-par the past few years, to a point I can't stand 95% of the crap they churn out.

I won't support Disney so that means no Hulu as well.
I don't support Apple.
I've got zero interest in what Peacock has......and the list goes on like that for me.

I pop onto my brother's prime account from time to time and generally find nothing terribly interesting there. What I do know is that Prime doesn't seem to give a rip about sharing passwords.

You know, I really don't watch much anymore and I don't miss it.
 
I ditched streaming services long ago because of their broken promises. They promised no ads for subscribers, then pushed ads anyway. Then they continued to raise prices without adding to or improving the content. It makes no sense to contract with a company who can change the terms of their contract with you whenever they see fit. To call it one-sided is an understatement. These days I just resort to torrents to watch what I want and the content I download is commercial ad free and I can binge-watch my favorite series at my leisure.
 
>bans accounts for password sharing because service is to expensive
>Noone resubscribes
It's a self correcting problem. At the very least, a self punishing problem. 90% of the password sharing I see is going over someone's house and someone logs into the persons Smart TV so we can watch something at their house and then the person just never logs out.
They would be Ok with that if people logged out. I have always though they should allow temporary sign-ins via your phone and a QR code at a minimum that allows use of the the account for a few hours and then expires.
 
Back