Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Legacy Archives

Netflix now lets you choose which Facebook friends you recommend movies to

Add as a preferred source on Google

Netflix announced today that it has revamped its social recommendation feature with a more seamless Facebook sharing process and, more importantly, has made that process as private as each individual user wants it to be.

Related: U.S. regulations standing in the way of Netflix-Facebook integration

Recommended Videos

Now when a Netflix viewer finishes watching a selection, they’ll be asked if they have any friends who’d also like the show. Netflix will then prompt the user to find their friends by connecting their Facebook account. Once linked, a row with pictures of the user’s Facebook friends appears at the bottom of the screen. Select which friends you’d like to share the show or movie with, add an optional message, and click Send.

The chosen friends will receive their recommendations the next time they log in. Also, you’ll be notified whenever a friend watches one of your recommendations or adds it to their list. Netflix claims that connecting the two accounts will not post to Facebook or share what a user watches to their friends’ news News Feed automatically.

Friends who haven’t yet connected their Facebook accounts to Netflix will receive any recommendations as a private message to Facebook Messenger. The updated sharing feature launches today and is available on the Netflix website, iPad, iPhone, PS3, Xbox, and various set-top boxes and smart TVs. Netflix claims it will be “adding additional platforms in the coming months.”

Up until the very end of 2012, U.S. federal regulations prevented companies from any form of making its users’ viewing habits public information without exclusive written permission, effectively prohibiting Netflix from sharing Facebook users’ interactions with the streaming service. But when the House of Representatives updated the Video Privacy Protection Act in December 2012, it finally cleared the way for Netflix users looking to share their watched or recommended shows and movies via Facebook.

Netflix’s director for product innovation, Cameron Johnson, told Mashable that most Netflix subscribers in the U.S. have not linked their accounts with Facebook, while in Europe and Latin America, where users have already had access to more advanced Facebook settings and options for some time, already connect the two services at a higher number. Johnson attributed the disparity to the later arrival of said Facebook features in the U.S., saying the U.S. built its subscriber base before the new features were in place.

Netflix is hoping its new, more surgical means to share all your favorite Netflix content will get more people to connect their accounts and, in turn, bring more people into the fold through excitement about what they’re watching. The easier method of sharing recommendations across the massive Facebook subscriber base will, in theory, only make Netflix more visible, and more popular.

Alex Tretbar
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Alex Tretbar, audio/video intern, is a writer, editor, musician, gamer and sci-fi nerd raised on EverQuest and Magic: The…
LG C6H OLED Evo AI Review: The First Meaningful C-Series Upgrade in Years?
This one stays true to its roots, while delivering upgrades that revive the C-series as a worthwhy investment.
Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware

Buy from Best Buy

The LG C-Series has long occupied a unique position in the TV market. For years, it has been the default recommendation for anyone looking for a premium OLED experience without stepping into flagship pricing territory. It consistently delivered the picture quality, gaming performance, and overall reliability that made it one of the safest OLED recommendations available.

Read more
Tidal lays down the rules for AI music. I wish Spotify and everyone else would follow
Tidal app showing on iPhone 15 Pro.

Every week, the AI music problem is getting increasingly hard to ignore, especially for streaming platforms. Deezer reported that 44% of all new music uploaded to its platform daily is now AI-generated; that's almost half the songs.

Spotify relabeled and tightened its AI policies last September, while Apple Music announced a tagging approach in March. However, the subscription-based artist-first music platform Tidal has done something none of them did. 

Read more
Netflix just got a whole lot more irritating if you share a screen in a household
Every profile will soon need its own email address, adding another hurdle for households that share a TV.
Netflix on TV couple watching

Netflix's password-sharing crackdown isn't over just yet. The streaming giant is now rolling out another change that could make shared household accounts a little more cumbersome, this time by asking every profile on an account to have its own email address. While the move isn't designed to stop families from sharing a subscription, it does add another layer of identity verification that many users probably weren't asking for.

Netflix wants every profile to have its own identity

Read more