this post was submitted on 01 May 2025
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cross-posted from: https://poptalk.scrubbles.tech/post/2333639

I was just forwarded this someone in my household who watches our server. That's it folks. I've been a hold out for a long time, but this is honestly it.

They want me to pay to stream content that I bought from my hardware transcoded also on my hardware.

I'll say it. As of today, I say Plex is dead. Luckily I've been setting up Jellyfin, I guess it's time to make it production ready.

Edit: I have a Plex Pass. More comments saying “Just buy a plex pass” are seriously not getting it. I have a Plex Pass and my users are still getting this.

And for the thousandth person who wants to say the same things to me:

  • YES I know I'm unaffected as a Plex Pass owner.
  • My users were immediately angry at it, which made me angry. Our users don't understand what plex pass is, and they shouldn't have to, that's why I had it. The fact that they were pinged even though it should have kept working is horribly sloppy
  • Plex is still removing functionality. I don't care that "People should pay their fair share". If Plex wants to put every new feature behind a paywall, that's completely okay. They are removing functionality.
    • "But they have cloud costs". Remote streaming is negligible to them. It's a dynamic DNS service. Plex client logs in, asks where server is, plex cloud responds with the IP and port of where server is located. That's it.
    • "Good luck finding another remote streaming" - Again, Plex just opens up an IP and port. Jellyfin also just opens up an IP and port (Hold on jellyfin folks I know, security, that's a separate conversation). All "remote streaming" is is their dynamic dns. Literal pennies to them. Know what actually is costing them money? Hosting all of that ad-supported "free" content that they're probably losing money on.

In short, I don't care how you justify it. Plex is doing something shitty. They're removing functionality that has been free for years. I'm not responding to any more of your comments repeating the same arguments over and over.

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[–] AntiBigotBrigade@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 minutes ago

"Your friends" hahaha good joke

[–] WickedZebra66@lemmy.world 10 points 1 hour ago

Heloooooo Jellyfin!

[–] Heikki@lemm.ee 2 points 1 hour ago (2 children)

How does this affect people who bought the lifetime service back in 2010?

[–] Fribbtastic@lemmy.world 1 points 53 minutes ago

It doesn't, even when you share the Server, your users will be able to stream remotely.

[–] xodoh74984@lemmy.world 19 points 3 hours ago

I don't see this talked about much anymore, but the day Plex added telemetry in 2017 was the day I became five-alarm desperate for an alternative. Had to wait a 2-3 years with Plex's telemetry IP's and domains blacklisted before Jellyfin was mature enough for me to make the change.

How Plex users can be comfortable with any telemetry is beyond me.

[–] RabbitBBQ@lemmy.world 11 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

The business model here is to basically paywall one user sharing (probably) pirated content with another person?

[–] bitjunkie@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago

I can't imagine how that could go tits-up for them in court

[–] Qlin@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

Do you guys know a way on jellyfin to download media to the phone in lower quality/ less storage intense? This is the only thing I miss in my jellyfin instance

[–] Batman@lemmy.world 1 points 9 minutes ago* (last edited 8 minutes ago)

Not really a big deal for me but I looked around and couldn't find anything sadly. My media is generally 2k with a larger phone it hasn't hit me to hard to switch seasons in and out (as they allow bulk downloads of seasons). Certainly would be a good feature I'd say!

[–] sj_zero@lotide.fbxl.net 10 points 5 hours ago

I started on Plex and even considered a lifetime Plex pass, but I felt like it was more interested in showing their content than my content. It was a lot of effort just to show music and movies.

My family and I use jellyfin every day now, and a key thing is it starts off boring but it shows your music, your movies, your books, your photos.

For folks who migrate who were paying, consider a donation to projects you make heavy use of. They don't usually have big companies behind them and can use the help.

[–] Carrot 11 points 7 hours ago

Been on Plex for years, I will be fully migrated to Jellyfin by the end of the week

[–] endeavor@sopuli.xyz 26 points 10 hours ago

So let me get this straight: you own the content, you host the content on your machine, you pay the electricity and internet and plex says it can't afford to let you share it to others without a subscription fee?

I mean making plex a one time fee if it's good turnkey solution is fine but subscription...

[–] MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca 6 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

I am also a Plex pass person. Multiple times over in fact. I actually have a dedicated account for my server administrator that's separate from the account I use to watch content. Both have Plex pass lifetime.

I've been familiar with this coming down the pipeline for a while and because I have Plex pass, I too, am unaffected, as are my users.

At the same time: here is a piece of software that I paid for. It's "server" software, sure, but it's just a software package. What it does isn't really relevant. The fact is that it processes data stored on my systems, processing by my systems, using my hardware, and sends that data over the Internet, using the Internet connection I pay for separately, and delivers that data directly to the people I've designated as capable of doing so.

The only part of this process that Plex, the company, has any involvement in, is limited to: issuing an SSL certificate, managing user accounts and passwords, and brokering where to find data (pointers to my systems).

You can get a free SSL certificate from let's encrypt. User accounts, authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA), is a function of pretty much everything that you remotely connect to, whether a Windows SMB/cifs share, your email, even logging into your own local computer regardless of OS..... And honestly, brokering the connection isn't dissimilar to how torrent trackers work, DNS or a goddamned IP address punched into a browser.

They're offering shockingly little for what they're asking, and the only thing that's on the list that would be costly in the slightest is having a DNS name for the server (registration of the domain, DNS services, etc). And given the scale that they're doing these things at, the individual costs per name is literally pennies per year.

This is not a good look at all.

I have domain names coming out of my ears. I'm tempted to buy one more and just offer to anyone that wants it, to have a subdomain name under that to run their Plex alternative on, so you can get a let's encrypt SSL certificate, and stay safe on the Internet. I don't want the feds snooping into what totally legal Linux ISOs are being shared.

I just don't know how to program at all, so I have no idea how I would go about setting up a system for that. The concept would be to automate it, and have people create an account, then request a DNS name under one of my DNS domains, and have a setting if you want it to have an A record, AAAA record, or cname (if you have a ddns setup). Once the request is in, it would connect to be DNS provider and add the record for you.

The part I'd want to have as a check on the system is to make sure that you're hosting jellyfin or something from the address you submit, to prevent people from using it for unrelated purposes; but even with that.... Do I care of people do that? Probably not. I would limit how many addresses you can have per account.

[–] HappyStarDiaz@real.lemmy.fan -2 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

Lot of words to say you don’t know how a business works or how much it costs…

[–] MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 hour ago

I have a very good knowledge of business operations.

They already offered Plex pass to earn their income. Plex is an extremely price elastic product, given that alternatives like jellyfin exist. They are taking features away, and charging people if they don't want to lose those features. That's a really good way to piss off your existing userbase (or customer base). Better would be to offer something new, and charge for that. Keep existing products at the same cost, but have "better" products at a premium. You won't get a huge number of people buying the extended product, but it will likely be more new paying users than how many you would get with the crap they're doing now, and they wouldn't lose any customers in the process.

When you understand the social and economic factors here, this is a super idiotic move. When you're only looking at how many dollars you can extract from the customer base, this is a golden idea.... I mean, it will fail, but it looks golden if you're only looking at the money numbers.

I would question whether you know how a business works (or whether Plex does, for that matter).

As far as I'm concerned, Plex failed to read the room. They were already walking a fine line with the people in a legal grey area, which comprised a good amount of their customer base (those that are sharing media at least). There's a nontrivial number of people who share media that are rather paranoid with reason. Nobody wants the RIAA/MPAA to have any reason to investigate what you are doing on the Internet. We all know how well that goes from the whole Napster thing. So now than a few are almost tinfoil hat level of paranoid. Many have already jumped ship to jellyfin or something similar. The rest are either unconcerned, not paying attention, or simply don't care. I would argue that the numbers of people who run servers currently that host content using Plex, that are not looking at alternatives because of this, is pretty damned low.

Plex alienated the group that brought everyone into their umbrella. When the people who host media entirely abandon their product because of this shit, their client base vaporizes.

Can't have a product or company with no clients. At least, not for long.

[–] EaterOfLentils@programming.dev 16 points 11 hours ago

Enshittification marches on.

[–] chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world 16 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (3 children)

I bought Plex Pass when it was $75 for the lifetime option.

I prefer Jellyfin, but sharing is harder for family members with it because I can't get them to just log in without existing credentials (Google Account, Apple ID, etc). Trying to convince my 67 year old mother-in-law to enter a URL, username, and password into an app with a remote is like asking my child to eat broccoli.

For now, I'll keep running dual stack with both. If Plex pulls lifetime passes, even though it'll be a PITA, I'll convert everyone to Jellyfin despite the pain.

[–] Evotech@lemmy.world 1 points 5 hours ago

I can’t even get my mother in law to use Plex tbh

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[–] craig9@lemm.ee 14 points 13 hours ago

Ditched this crapware for Jellyfin several years ago. Glad I did. It's been great.

[–] vga@sopuli.xyz 3 points 10 hours ago (3 children)

What's Plex's use case? Why not just mpv locally?

[–] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 2 points 29 minutes ago

Plex (originally) and Jellyfin are a centralized way of managing your media with aesthetic and easy to use interfaces. I have one Jellyfin server and I have a Netflix/Display+ type interaction with my media. I have the same content on my phone, wife's phone, my desktop, laptop, my TV, etc.

All watch history, recommendations, up next queue, and so on.

And with the right setup (Wireguard in my case) I can access that content from anywhere.

[–] loutr@sh.itjust.works 3 points 5 hours ago

Plex sucks but jellyseer, the *arr stack and jellyfin are all open source and entirely free. Together they provide an experience almost as straightforward as any commercial streaming platform: find a media on jellyseerr and request it with a single click. A few minutes* later the media is available in Jellyfin, and you can watch it on your computer, smartphone, smart TV, ...

*with Usenet and a good internet connection

[–] Scrollone@feddit.it 4 points 10 hours ago

It's useful to have one of your friends host a home server and share all the movies with your friends. Then you can watch from the smart tv

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