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anthony_franco | 6 years ago

Amazon directly competes with Netflix and they get along fine.

https://aws.amazon.com/solutions/case-studies/netflix/

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djsumdog|6 years ago

I thought Netflix has slowly been moving stuff to their own data centers as they grow and has distanced themselves from AWS on more critical stuff?

secabeen|6 years ago

Netflix still uses AWS for much of their support systems (billing, discovery, etc. etc.) The core business of delivering video is not on AWS and has never been. That runs on their in-house CDN, OpenConnect.

echelon|6 years ago

> distanced themselves from AWS on more critical stuff?

Can someone familiar with Netflix speak to this?

It makes sense that they'll continue to run stuff in AWS due to their existing footprint, but are they mandated to build new stuff outside the cloud? And if so, why?

numlock86|6 years ago

IIRC it is the other way around. They had much larger data centers but migrate more and more to AWS because of the stereotypical "on-premise vs cloud in large company"-reasons.

mandeepj|6 years ago

It’s not the same thing with Netflix. If five movies from Netflix originals did well this year then what Amazon prime can do about it? It’s not a charger cable that they can right away stock and start selling it :-).

The catalog of successful movies is available publicly anyway :-)

lowdose|6 years ago

IMDB is also owned by Amazon.

tw04|6 years ago

I think it's a stretch to say they directly compete. Amazon's Prime service covers a tiny fraction of their catalogue. And everything else is a per-move/show rental or purchase fee. I technically have both because prime video is just included with the membership, but there's no way I would ever pay Amazon more money for Prime Video vs. something like Netflix.

jjeaff|6 years ago

A stretch? If prime isn't a direct competitor, then no one is. Competitors can have different pricing structures and still be competitors.