I like the sentiment but I don't think this is the answer. I don't use Bit Torrent myself but I know how it works. It was very popular when I was in college and students would constantly have their dorm internet suspended for the rest of the week for going over their weekly data limits. The reason they were going over their limit wasn't because they were downloading to much illegal music. It was because their computers were constantly uploading files in the background to other users and they weren't smart enough to turn that off.
P2P services like bit torrent rely on individual users like us being the server for others to download from. Files you download from bit torrent are then made available for other people to download from you. They pool this all together so that one person trying to download can be getting bits from several different uploaders who have that file on their computer at the same time. That way a bunch of people with upload speeds much slower than a typical download speed can add up to make acceptable transfer speeds.
This is the way it would work in Netflix's case. You want to watch an episode of The Walking Dead on Netflix. That episode is then stored on your computer for you to watch. When someone else wants to watch that episode from Netflix you and a group of other Netflix customers who have that episode stored on their computers would upload it to the new user who wants it. This would happen in the background without you necessarily even knowing about it.
That's all fine and dandy for a free service like Bit Torrent. I have a big problem when a service I pay for like Netflix wants to do it though. I pay them to watch videos. I do not pay them to turn my computer into one of their servers. I do not pay them to take up storage space on my computer. I do not pay them to slow down my internet connection and eat up my data limit by uploading files off my computer to other users.