aja8888
Moderator Emeritus
Outlier: None. It's been months since the TV has even been turned on.
Might be a good time to just throw the thing out!
Outlier: None. It's been months since the TV has even been turned on.
I would do it but a couple of years ago DW found a show that she wanted to watch, so she used the TV a bit then. Mostly watched on her computer tho. So for peace in the family it stays.Might be a good time to just throw the thing out!
I would do it but a couple of years ago DW found a show that she wanted to watch, so she used the TV a bit then. Mostly watched on her computer tho. So for peace in the family it stays.
I would do it but a couple of years ago DW found a show that she wanted to watch, so she used the TV a bit then. Mostly watched on her computer tho. So for peace in the family it stays.Might be a good time to just throw the thing out!
It seems very common based upon news media that families/friends share logins to some streaming services. Some will attempt to start to charge or monetize on this practice.
Maybe I'll learn something here... "In this context", is borrowing the logon info for a paid for streaming service the same as stealing?
-Tidal (music) $12 monthly
-YouTube Premium $16 monthly
-NBA LP $129 annual charge
-Usenext $80 annual charge
-Curiosity Stream Premium (access to Somm TV, Tastemade, Topic,
Nebula, One Day University, and Da Vinci Kids) $ 69 annual charge
Total annual cost: $614.00
unless the TOS permits it, yes. theft of service. the streaming service would have to catch you and the account holder could face fines or a disconnect. the borrower might be asked to pay up. criminal TOS charges might occur in only extreme cases (example: one account being shared with many families).