Thursday, 26 June 2014

Netflix in negotiations to officially head to Aussie shores

Netflix in negotiations to officially head to Aussie shores

According to a new report, Village Roadshow co-CEO Graham Burke has confirmed that Netflix is currently in negotiations with the production and distribution company for a possible Australian launch.


Speaking to ZDNet about the US-based streaming service that has most Aussies envious, Burke said: "... they're talking to our people about supply of products, so they are opening and coming to Australia."


He didn't give a time-frame for an Aussie launch, but as Netflix has had its logo trademark registered in Australia since October 2012, the confirmed negotiations hints at a launch that could happen as early as next year.


Netflix is currently available in the US, Canada, Mexico, parts of South America, the Caribbean, the UK and parts of Europe.


The Netflix dream


Accessing international shows and documentaries easily and fast in Australia has been a bit of a sore point for Aussies, though local services like Foxtel Presto, Ezyflix and Quickflix have popped up over the past few years.


While talks of piracy legislation and site-blocking are headlining at the moment, if Netflix does launch in Australia, people will no longer be able to use the lack of available Netflix-like services as an excuse for piracy of shows and films.


Netflix will still need to negotiate deals with international production houses and distribution companies that it already has deals in place with for content - as it is with Village Roadshow - but it will also need to work out deals with Australian companies that hold distribution and broadcasting rights as well.


So until a launch actually comes around to Australia - and while regulators, governments, distributors, and ISPs argue the legality of VPNs - most Aussies will likely continue to resort to bypassing geo-blocks to gain access to the cheap and quick Netflix.

















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