Netflix In Talks With Cable Companies To Come Straight To Your TV: WSJ

Netflix Could Being Coming Straight To Your TV
LOS GATOS, CA - JULY 20: A sign is posted in front of the Netflix headquarters on July 20, 2011 in Los Gatos, California. Online movie rental company Netflix will report quarterly earnings on Thursday following a recent customer backlash over a 60 percent increase in fees. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
LOS GATOS, CA - JULY 20: A sign is posted in front of the Netflix headquarters on July 20, 2011 in Los Gatos, California. Online movie rental company Netflix will report quarterly earnings on Thursday following a recent customer backlash over a 60 percent increase in fees. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Netflix Inc is in talks with several U.S. cable television companies including Comcast Corp and Suddenlink Communications to make its streaming video service available through their set-top boxes, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, citing people familiar with the matter.

According to the Journal, the negotiations are in the early stages, with no deal expected soon. The report said that one sticking point in the negotiations is that Netflix wants cable companies to adopt special technology designed to improve the quality of its streaming video.

Last month, two European cable companies -- Sweden's Com Hem and Virgin Media in Britain -- struck deals to allow their customers to access Netflix through Tivo set-top boxes.

Netflix Chief Financial Officer David Wells, speaking at a Goldman Sachs investor conference last month, said that the company was willing to strike similar deals with U.S. cable companies.

"We would love to reduce the friction to the end consumer, and to be available via the existing device in the home which is the set-top box," Wells said. "But it's up to the (pay TV provider) to decide how much a competitor they view us as, or a complement."

Netflix, Comcast and Suddenlink could not be immediately reached for comment.

(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Diane Craft)

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