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CULTURE

Danish public broadcaster to make login mandatory for streaming services

Denmark’s public service broadcaster DR will require users to log in to use its streaming services from 2024, enabling users to save their place within a series and receive recommendations through personalised profiles.

Danish public broadcaster to make login mandatory for streaming services
Broadcaster DR will require a login for streaming from 2024. File photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

The broadcaster’s online streaming service, DRTV, will require a login from next year, DR said in a statement. Currently, the service can be used without logging in.

It will remain possible to watch live television and linear television without logging in.

The change will improve the user experience by making DRTV more “personally relevant”, the broadcaster said.

“When you log in, you’ll get your own front page for DRTV. There will be content all Danes can join in on, and there will be content that is more personally relevant for individuals,” DR’s director for strategy and users Lasse Bastkjær Jensen said in the statement.

A name and email address will be required to create a login profile, but suggested content will be primarily based on user behaviour, DR says.

DR editors will be able to prioritise the content which is given prominence on the platform by monitoring and selecting programmes.

Alongside this, DRTV will also use a system that will generate recommended content by registering the types of programmes an individual tends to prefer and prioritising it.

This will make the DRTV platform more individualised over time, according to the broadcaster.

“I’m convinced that the vast majority will welcome the new login because the benefits are clear. Take for example the time it takes to find out how far you are into a programme you have not yet finished. With the new login, this will be completely automatic, in the same way we are used to from other streaming services,” Jensen said.

Households will only require a single login, with each member able to create their own profiles under that login, including child profiles.

The switchover will occur “early in the second quarter” of 2024, according to the DR statement.

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CRIME

‘More Danes than ever’ victims of digital crime

Almost 190,000 people in Denmark were the victims of IT-related crime in 2023, according to new figures.

'More Danes than ever' victims of digital crime

The number, released by the Danish Crime Prevention Council (Det Kriminalpræventive Råd) represents a significant increase on the previous year’s figure of 150,000.

Denmark’s justice ministry, national police and the University of Copenhagen all work with the Crime Prevention Council in an annual study which tracks the figure through contact with victims.

It represents a trend which is unlikely to slow down in coming years, according to the Council’s director Erik Christensen.

“Technological advances mean that there are more and more doors through which the criminals can walk in relation to scamming us normal members of the public,” he told newswire Ritzau.

The emergence of AI could make it even more likely that people become subjected to digital fraud attempts, he said.

The study found that online payments and abuse of payment information were most common types of fraud defined as IT-related.

But “contact fraud”, in which scammers contact targets by email, telephone or online, is also on the rise.

The figure for that specific type of crime went from 13,000 in 2022 to 47,000 last year.

READ ALSO: Danish courts issue warning over SMS scam

“Our best advice is that if each of us takes good time when we get an email or SMS… and check whether it is [actually] from the Tax Agency, municipality or bank,” Christensen said.

He also advised asking a family member or trusted person for a second opinion before answering any email or SMS, if in doubt.

In the most common type of IT crime – online transactions – some 85,000 people in Denmark last year lost money to scams such as fake web shops or trades with private individuals.

Another form – which hit 64,000 people – involves purchase of a fake or counterfeit item.

Some 76,000 people were victims of having their bank card details stolen and misused, some 19,000 more than in 2022.

“We must move away from shaming people who get scammed because anyone can fall victim to it. Even when you look at these numbers, we know there are also unreported cases,” Christensen said.

The Council director stressed the importance of victims of online fraud not feeling shame over what had happened.

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