Opinion
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WA
CEO & Editor-in-Chief
Netflix has been global for years, but it still doesn’t act like it. A simple move to another country turns into a frustrating tech support saga. Instead of upgrading its infrastructure to match its global audience, Netflix imposes old-world limitations that force users to cancel their accounts, wait out billing cycles, and restart from scratch — all just to reflect a change of location.
This isn’t just inconvenient — it’s a product failure. In an age of seamless apps and borderless finance, how did the world’s leading streaming platform become the most rigid?
As someone who travels frequently for work, I experienced this first-hand. My Netflix account simply stopped working. There was no alert, no message — just buffering screens and missing shows. It wasn’t until I contacted support that I was told I had to cancel and start over in the new country. This is not just bad user experience; it's evidence of an outdated system that fails the very users it claims to serve.
We’re surrounded by Web3 projects building "solutions" for problems that don’t really exist — yet here’s one that hits millions of users: People move. People travel. People work across borders. But Netflix doesn’t.
Despite marketing itself as a global service, Netflix locks accounts to the country of signup. Payment is restricted to local currencies. Licensing issues prevent smooth content portability. And worst of all, the company offers no intelligent or dynamic way to migrate an account between countries.
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A user in the UAE moving to France? Cancel. Wait. Restart. Lose content. Rinse, repeat. And as one user review puts it bluntly: “This is the end of Netflix.”
If Netflix genuinely wants to serve a global audience, blockchain infrastructure offers clear and practical upgrades:
Netflix pioneered the streaming industry. But the limitations in its current system — especially for global users — are relics of a pre-blockchain digital economy. If Netflix doesn’t evolve, it will open the door for new platforms to solve this problem from the ground up.
Already, decentralized video platforms are experimenting with blockchain-powered content delivery. They’re not yet mainstream, but they are being built with today’s user in mind: global, mobile, and increasingly decentralized.
Many blockchain projects chase abstract goals. This isn’t one of them. Netflix’s inability to serve global users is a concrete, widespread issue — and blockchain offers real, implementable fixes.
If Netflix wants to stay relevant in a truly global digital economy, it needs to rewire its infrastructure for flexibility, ownership, and mobility. Otherwise, someone else will — and the next generation of streaming won’t be built in Hollywood. It’ll be built on-chain.




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