Ask HN: How can Netflix and Amazon Prime be this bad at recommending content?
49 points| roboy | 3 years ago
It would be so easy: - Store series I‘ve watched, show me new seasons when they release. - neither does it reliably. - Don’t keep suggesting things I have watched, except in a „watch again“ category. Especially using new pictures, getting me to click on the same stuff only to realize that I have seen this already.
Given the billions invested in these UIs, how can they fail so miserably? What am I missing? This makes no economic sense … or am I just a weird edge case, and this kind of UI works for the majority?
boffinism|3 years ago
The recommendation system is the thing that shows you stuff without you needing to browse for 20 mins.
karmakaze|3 years ago
I get the sense that they're A/B testing the wrong metric: time spent in the app. I'll often spend more time looking than a couple episodes of a show.
Fire-Dragon-DoL|3 years ago
They haven't recommended me lockwood and co on Netflix, we stumbled on it because it was popular (and we binged watched it one night when both were asleep).
So I do think it sucks. Recommendation seems to consider similarity, but not "quality" : they give equal treatment to their products, and the consequence seems to be that they show often garbage mixed in with good stuff...
varispeed|3 years ago
Often I find stuff on Reddit or other forums or through my own research then look for it on Amazon or Netflix and often it is there, but was never recommended to me.
humanistbot|3 years ago
that_guy_iain|3 years ago
hombre_fatal|3 years ago
I've tried all sorts of "people who liked X also enjoyed Y" book and movie lists and it never seems any better than a generic list of decent books and movies.
One of my favorite movies is The Arrival. To me, it's one of the best love stories ever told. Yet when I meet other people who really liked the movie, that wasn't the main draw for them. Perhaps it was the intrigue of the time travel or watching interesting characters navigate a complex conflict or perhaps they liked the provocative questions that it explores.
Perhaps two people liking The Arrival says little about what they have in common at all, thus there's actually no data to go off beyond recommending both parties more critically acclaimed movies. I suspect that this might be the cold reality of recommendations.
smartbit|3 years ago
When I meet people with seemingly the same taste, usually we exchange our trophies, eg my latest
JohnFen|3 years ago
roboy|3 years ago
Cyberdogs7|3 years ago
roboy|3 years ago
jareklupinski|3 years ago
hauxir|3 years ago
https://tomatotree.tv
CrypticShift|3 years ago
protoz|3 years ago
For example, The Great Pretender is at 100% from critics but doesn't show up at all here.
unknown|3 years ago
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latexr|3 years ago
roboy|3 years ago
otikik|3 years ago
coenhyde|3 years ago
I don't have time to shift out the good from the bad with Netflix.
workingdog|3 years ago
13of40|3 years ago
988747|3 years ago
TigeriusKirk|3 years ago
thewebcount|3 years ago
In many cases, probably, either directly or indirectly. Payola is huge in the music industry and it’s why, despite never having heard of Harry Styles before, Apple Music started pushing him into every corner of their app for a few weeks after his last album release. I can understand surfacing artists who are likely to be popular with the general population. But this was clearly more than that. I’m sure it’s the same with video services. They’re paid to promote specific shows. It probably also costs them less to show you their own shows, so those are probably surfaced more frequently than shows from other companies, etc.
atum47|3 years ago
They suggest the same thing over and over under "different" categories. I they go try to force "popular" content on you.
One of the reasons I made this joke/rant project
https://victorribeiro.com/recommendation/
teknofobi|3 years ago
The big events gets featured on the home page, for anything you are probably better of searching for directors or reading reviews, and then finding where you can see it.
roboy|3 years ago
xyzsparetimexyz|3 years ago
navhc|3 years ago
nicolaslem|3 years ago
owlninja|3 years ago
Raed667|3 years ago
curun1r|3 years ago
They know they don’t have enough premium content to keep you as a subscriber if that’s all you watch. That kind of content usually costs a ton to create. So they need to have you watch filler content as well. And just like social media companies have taken advantage of the slot machine effect to increase addictiveness, so too do streamers. If everything you watch is good, you’ll end up watching less and be more likely to cancel.
You’re assuming that the goal of a recommendation algorithm is to recommend the thing you’d most want to watch at that specific moment. It’s not. The goal is to maximize their retention. It’s amazing how many of life’s annoyances become instantly explainable when you realize that your interests are not aligned with those of the companies you’re dealing with. Your happiness will always be a secondary concern to their profits.
dgeiser13|3 years ago
My major problem with almost all recommendation engines and add-ons is that most of the time I want a recommendation that is orthogonal to the last thing I watched.
If I just watched a Japanese yakuza crime thriller I don't want you to recommend another Japanese yakuza crime thriller. Give me something as good as what I just watched but different. But that's me. Many people just want to watch Hallmark Christmas romances until their heads explode.
That's probably why I still use Criticker. Because it gives you one choice across multiple genres.
https://www.criticker.com/
ulizzle|3 years ago
irvingprime|3 years ago
But part of the problem the algorithm has is that content is of very uneven quality. I look at very recent things that, a few years ago, I would have wanted to see, and scroll on by. The first Avengers movie? Kind of rushed but acceptable. Thor Love and Thunder? Garbage. (Not Netflix examples, just examples)
We want to see new content but have learned from recent experience that it's not worth the trouble. The algorithm simply can't understand that.
ZeroGravitas|3 years ago
This lets it recommend across different services and removes incentives to promote their own content (I'm assuming someone at Amazon and Netflix is trying to goose their own stats by boosting the content they self create, or that they pay the least for)
A link (and a free recommendation for an interesting show):
https://trakt.tv/shows/giri-haji
It lets you do nerdier searches like by director, writer, actor and similar to openlibrary.org it has some weird old stuff too.
thewebcount|3 years ago
HellDunkel|3 years ago
foepys|3 years ago
You can disable autoplay previews for all devices on Netflix' website in your profile.
r00fus|3 years ago
Why do Apple and Amazon have search “ads”? They’re specifically trying to push content your way based on the how much the content creator/producer pays extra.
Even grocery stores do this - aisle placement is often something the food distributor pays for.
er0cksc|3 years ago
gkoberger|3 years ago
It says almost the exact opposite; they cache shows based on the algorithm, not that they recommend shows based on what's cached.
etrautmann|3 years ago
Lio|3 years ago
...come to think of it so does YouTube.
I'd love to be able to search for a particular genre and exclude everything that comes up.
owlninja|3 years ago
soco|3 years ago
InitialLastName|3 years ago
FWIW, Spotify has similar issues in that they can't seem to figure out that new music from artists I'm "following" should be a slam dunk for the "new music for you" list.
roboy|3 years ago
jstummbillig|3 years ago
Me, I haven't found a second The Wire yet, no matter how often a recommender claimed I have.
rs999gti|3 years ago
Baltimore and the same Wire producers and actors.
The only con is it is only one season.
mtoddsmith|3 years ago
yowzadave|3 years ago
oneoff786|3 years ago
MoSattler|3 years ago
trog|3 years ago
I continually see the same bunch of shows when browsing that I will never, ever watch. They take up space and add to cognitive load and ultimately just annoy me each time I see them in the list.
I'm sure this weighting would also be very useful from an algorithmic recommendations view as well.
prirun|3 years ago
IMO, they don't use anything like that now for streaming. It's as others have said: this is what we want you to watch, not what you necessarily will like.
peterhi|3 years ago
Amazon doesn't know who I bought something for so making sense of why I have bought 4 padlocks (my father in law), a set of sauce pans (wife), a light novel (myself) and rechargeable batteries (myself)
roboy|3 years ago
CrypticShift|3 years ago
acd|3 years ago
Its a bit the same as dating algorithms. If the algorithm was to good there would be no paying users of the service.
shahbaby|3 years ago
Now as an adult there's too much out there and too little time.
I suspect that this is a big part of why people feel there's nothing good to watch.
roboy|3 years ago
MoSattler|3 years ago
I sure have a much smaller collection than any streaming service, but it's actually all content I like, and I actually watch stuff instead of just browsing for 20min.
cramjabsyn|3 years ago
imachine1980_|3 years ago
Edit: are you seeing alone or whit other
unknown|3 years ago
[deleted]
JohnFen|3 years ago
angelbar|3 years ago
pdntspa|3 years ago
IG_Semmelweiss|3 years ago
Scalene2|3 years ago
ruined|3 years ago
encryptluks2|3 years ago
ralusek|3 years ago
ben_w|3 years ago
Doing this well seems to be surprisingly difficult for everyone. Facebook has shown me local news in Florida even though I'm British, live in Berlin, and have not even visited that state. Twitter thought I was interested in baseball, when I don't care for any spectator sports. YouTube is mostly OK for the long form content, but the shorts are 98% useless, and the adverts are… well, the current ad for me in the app is "Click this video = $1000" ad by "Beast Promo" with a cartoon that looks like MrBeast, which absolutely screams "scam", and last week it was something that looked like an anti-LGBT conspiracy theorist but my German isn't good enough to be totally sure.
Netflix, Disney, and all the rest? IMO Netflix is the best of them, but still not really all that amazing — the bar it passes that the rest fail is excessive focus on their own content.
roboy|3 years ago