A diagnostic tool to fix issues with paid streaming services on web browsers.
Potential Opportunity: The user is dealing with a really annoying and tricky issue where certain paid streaming sites don't work, while others do. This suggests there might be some complex problems at play, like issues with DRM (Digital Rights Management), specific cache problems, or network settings that are messing with protected content. The user has tried multiple browsers, which indicates the problem is likely system-wide rather than just a browser-specific setting.
Product Form: A SaaS tool could act as a 'Streaming Browser Repair' utility. It would run a specialized diagnostic scan to check:
- The status and integrity of the Widevine DRM component across all installed browsers.
- Browser-specific streaming caches and protected content licenses.
- DNS resolution issues specifically with streaming Content Delivery Networks (CDNs).
- Conflicting extensions or security software that might interfere with DRM. The tool would then offer automated one-click fixes (like reinstalling the Widevine component or clearing specific corrupted data) or provide easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions for manual fixes.
Expected Revenue: The market for this tool would be individuals facing a specific, infrequent, but highly frustrating technical problem. This makes a subscription model less feasible. Revenue would likely come from a one-time purchase of the utility. The expected price point would be low, around $15-25 per license, making it a niche utility tool with modest overall revenue potential.