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492 points storf45 | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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shermantanktop ◴[] No.42160502[source]
Every time a big company screws up, there are two highly informed sets of people who are guaranteed to be lurking, but rarely post, in a thread like this:

1) those directly involved with the incident, or employees of the same company. They have too much to lose by circumventing the PR machine.

2) people at similar companies who operate similar systems with similar scale and risks. Those people know how hard this is and aren’t likely to publicly flog someone doing their same job based on uninformed speculation. They know their own systems are Byzantine and don’t look like what random onlookers think it would look like.

So that leaves the rest, who offer insights based on how stuff works at a small scale, or better yet, pronouncements rooted in “first principles.”

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grogenaut ◴[] No.42160568[source]
you are so right about that. tho I'm sure that many of the netflix folks are still doing their after action analysis in prep for Dec 25 NFL.

now take this realization and apply it to any news article or forum post you read and think about how uninformed they actually are.

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1. fragmede ◴[] No.42162072[source]
If NFL decides to keep Netflix for that, that is. The bandwidth for that fight was rookie numbers, and after that fiasco, why would the NFL not break their contract and choose someone with a proven track record doing bigger live events, like the World Cup?
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2. phil21 ◴[] No.42162136[source]
Because Netflix pays them either way, I would imagine. Breaking a contract on a sure thing to the tune of tens (hundreds?) of millions of dollars for a maybe is a large business risk.

Reputational damage is going to be far more Netflix than the NFL if they totally club it.

That and this fight is going to likely be an order of magnitude more viewers than the Christmas NFL games if the media estimates on viewership were remotely accurate. You’re talking Super Bowl type numbers vs a regular season NFL game. The problems start happening at the margin of capacity most of the time.

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3. listenallyall ◴[] No.42167846[source]
But "reputational damage" doesn't affect profits. Nobody is canceling Netflix because they had issues watching the fight, just like nobody will cancel if the NFL experience sucks on Netflix. They will bitch and moan on Twitter, but it's essentially just talk.