After nearly two days of streaming problems, the on-demand streaming media company, Netflix, announced that customers should be able to view their online streaming of movies, TV shows, games and other programs now.
The Los Gatos, California based company released a statement through its spokesman Joris Evers, who told Reuters, "We are investigating exactly what happened and how it could have been prevented."
The problem reportedly began on Christmas Eve, when several Netflix customers across Latin America, Canada and the United States experienced problems with their video streaming. Netflix attributed the issue to Amazon's web service cloud computing center according to Reuters.
People from Amazon have refused to comment on the matter.
The popular movie on demand rental service released a statement on its social media page apologizing to its customers for problems with its video streaming.
On its Twitter account @ Netflix, it tweeted "We're sorry for the Christmas Eve outage. Terrible timing! Engineers are working on it now. Stay tuned to @Netflixhelps for updates."
Many people across the nation experienced problems with its streaming on Christmas Eve, some have even reported problems before Dec 24. Now, problems with the program continue as Netflix released a statement indicating that it is working on the problem.
Later on Christmas day, the Evers announced that the problem was resolved and customers can now view online streaming.
Netflix is an online movie rental provider based in Los Gatos, California. In addition to providing unlimited online streaming, Netflix also provides a hardcopy dvd rentals through its mailing service. The company reportedly has more than 30 million streaming subscribers, of which 27 million are in the U.S.A.