Please wait ...

Latest News!

How Streaming Video Providers Can Tackle Password-Sharing, Pirated Content

  • Home
  • News
  • How Streaming Video Providers Can Tackle Password-Sharing, Pirated Content
  • November 17, 2024
4 mins read

Data from Deloitte’s Digital Media Trends study finds that a quarter of consumers surveyed (25%) admit to either using someone else’s SVOD password or watching pirated TV shows or movies in the previous 12 months. 

Data from Deloitte’s Digital Media Trends study finds that a quarter of consumers surveyed (25%) admit to either using someone else’s SVOD password or watching pirated TV shows or movies in the previous 12 months. Password borrowing is more prominent among consumers than watching pirated content: Fifteen percent of respondents use someone else’s SVOD password, compared with 7% who watch pirated TV shows or movies, and 4% who do both. Gen Zs and millennials are more likely to report being password borrowers and pirated-content watchers, perhaps due to a higher level of tech-savviness or lower amounts of disposable income.

For streaming video providers looking to curb these behaviors, understanding the motivations of these consumers may be illustrative.

Consumer Frustration with SVOD Prices

Password borrowers appear to be motivated largely by a desire to save money. More than one-third (35%) of borrowers say they don’t want to pay for a streaming video service, compared with a smaller share of pirated-content watchers (18%) who say the same. However, it may be worth noting that password borrowers are just as likely as consumers overall to pay for SVOD subscriptions, and they have roughly the same number of services in their homes.

So, while it’s unlikely that these viewers rely solely on borrowed credentials to access streaming services, they may be hitting their limit: The majority of borrowers (73%) are frustrated that the entertainment services they subscribe to continue to raise their prices, and 53% have canceled a paid streaming video service in the previous six months (compared with 40% of consumers overall). More than half of password borrowers surveyed say they would cancel the subscription to their favorite SVOD service if the monthly cost increased by $5.

Convenient Access to Entertainment

Consumers who watch pirated content want convenient access, the survey finds. They are less likely to say that streaming services are worth the price, and they are more likely to cancel their subscriptions. Some 40% of pirated-content watchers surveyed say they do so to get quick access to content they want to watch, compared with 18% of password borrowers. Pirated-content watchers are more critical of the value of entertainment offerings on streaming video, with half of this cohort saying the content available on SVOD isn’t worth the price, compared with 36% of consumers overall.

Likewise, 46% of pirated-content watchers—compared with just 27% of overall respondents—say they would prefer to pay to watch individual shows and movies rather than pay for a monthly subscription. These points are further illustrated by a significantly higher churn rate (62%) among pirated-content watchers when compared to respondents overall—along with a much higher churn-and-return rate (51% compared with 21% of consumers overall)—suggesting that this cohort cycles through SVOD services and offerings and visits unauthorized sites in search of the entertainment content they want to watch, when they want to watch it.

Strategies for SVOD Providers

To protect their content from being pirated and shared illegally online, SVOD providers should consider partnering with cybersecurity experts and cloud providers to leverage encryption and blockchain technologies and AI-monitored detection systems. Providers could also work to educate consumers about the dangers of accessing pirated content and implement systems for community reporting.

Streaming providers also should continue to explore lower-cost, ad-supported pricing tiers and pay-per-view models to make content accessible and to expand their user base. Password borrowers and pirated-content watchers surveyed are just as likely as consumers overall to subscribe to an ad-supported tier of a paid streaming service. Reducing the cost of SVOD basic services might attract these value-conscious viewers and prevent churn. Password borrowers and pirated-content watchers are more likely than the average consumer to watch a free, ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) service. FAST could be a way to bring them from the sidelines into revenue-generating services.

Last, SVOD providers should delve more deeply into the motivations of pirated-content watchers. They often want full, uncensored versions of content that they can’t find elsewhere—and they want it quickly. Looking at ways to meet those desires within the boundaries of a paid subscription could pay off for providers.


SVOD providers have put considerable effort into monitoring and combating both password-sharing and piracy. Boosting subscriber bases and revenue is critical for providers that have struggled continuously with profitability and consumer retention. Thinking creatively about why people turn to unauthorized methods of accessing content—and providing paid offerings to meet the demand—could turn pirated-content watchers and password borrowers into paying customers.

—by Arun Perinkolam, principal at Deloitte & Touche LLP, and Technology, Media, and Telecom industry leader for the Deloitte US Cyber & Strategic Risk Services practice; Brooke Auxier, research manager; and Akash Rawat, research specialist, both with Deloitte’s Center for Technology, Media & Telecommunications, Deloitte Services LP

Latest News!

Email Us Today!

Contact us today to get secure!

[email protected]