Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

Andy Samberg’s Password Sharing Gag at the Emmys Is No Joke for Streaming Services

Login credentials are meant to be shared among members of a household, sure. But according to research firm Parks Associates, unauthorized sharing can add up to about $500 million in lost revenue for companies like HBO, Amazon, Netflix, and Hulu, which USA Today says are used by around 58% of Americans.

Although some of those companies don’t consider password sharing to be a major issue, a poll by USA Today found that 36% of adult Americans who use premium TV streaming services have shared their passwords before.

From the article "Andy Samberg’s Password Sharing Gag at the Emmys Is No Joke for Streaming Services" by LA Independent. 

Previously In The News

TechSee Introduces Integrated Visual AI to Sophie Live, Drastically Improving Complex Service Interactions

"With more than half of DIY users reporting setup or connectivity issues, it is clear that complexity remains a major barrier to smart home adoption," said Elizabeth Parks, President at Parks Associat...

Home Entertainment Forecast 2026: Streaming Flexes Its Muscle, Transactional a Critical Revenue Bridge

In an added flourish to Netflix’s year, the service beat out Prime Video after three years at No. 2 on Parks Associates’ “Top 10 SVODs by Subscribers” chart. The pervasiveness of streaming is u...

Fiber For Breakfast Week 3: How Connected Homes are Powering Independence as America Ages

From fall detection and emergency alerts to remote monitoring and telehealth, connected tools are reshaping how older adults stay independent at home. That shift was at the center of this week’s F...

Survey: Is the streaming infrastructure ready for some football?

Sports streaming is more popular than ever. A November Parks Associates report found that more than a third of U.S. internet households (38%) subscribe to at least one sports-specific streaming servic...