Except a $10/month Netflix subscription is not a lease, it's a prepaid service. They all state very clearly that if, and when, someone doesn't pay those services are no longer rendered.
The gym memberships could be different if the contract is setup to give you your first month free when you sign up for six. But even then most give you some guarantee such as "if you're not satisfied". I think your point is that this type of service creates a cat and mouse game with which there is only a temporary winner.
What I do like about this new "trend" is the abstraction of the end user. Netflix doesn't need to know who I am. If I pay I should be able to consume service. I realize this opens the door to more potential fraud for them, but the reality is the people commiting that fraud today are already using fake names, addresses and email. And if services don't have real information and single use card information when they get breached the value of each record is significantly less. So at the end of the day the inconsequential side effect seems to be a win from a breach cost standpoint.
The gym memberships could be different if the contract is setup to give you your first month free when you sign up for six. But even then most give you some guarantee such as "if you're not satisfied". I think your point is that this type of service creates a cat and mouse game with which there is only a temporary winner.
What I do like about this new "trend" is the abstraction of the end user. Netflix doesn't need to know who I am. If I pay I should be able to consume service. I realize this opens the door to more potential fraud for them, but the reality is the people commiting that fraud today are already using fake names, addresses and email. And if services don't have real information and single use card information when they get breached the value of each record is significantly less. So at the end of the day the inconsequential side effect seems to be a win from a breach cost standpoint.