Televisions that can stream platforms like Hulu or Max usually come loaded with technology that collects information on what viewers are watching, and buyers consent to have their viewing tracked when they open their new TV and click through terms of service agreements. Sometimes, data firms can connect those viewing habits to a voter’s phone or laptop via their IP address, promising a trove of information about an individual and the ability to track them across screens.

Other times, firms focus on dividing households into groups based on what they’re watching, how they use their TVs and how many campaign ads they’re seeing, which is a boon to political campaigns eager to target specific groups of voters. Connecting this data to voter files is increasingly a focus — a move that adds individual voting habits into the mix.

  • sunzu@kbin.run
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    5 months ago

    Just don’t let it connect to internet.

    There are no good dumb teevees for home use

    • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      It will work at a premium cost, and only until they start selling them with LTE chips buried away in the motherboard.

      • LordCrom@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        So many devices come with those now… I open up my products and remove the card, the antenna, or the whole board if possible.

          • LordCrom@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            For example, my sleep apnea machine had a wifi for home and a LTE modem. Data gathered by the machine was sent off-site…no reports available on the host. Privacy policy read it would gather info, run diagnostics on itself and the local network without explanation of what it was doing.

            My sleep data could not be viewed by me, only through the 3rd party, so I ripped out the wifi board and LTE chip. I haul the machine into my doctor office so he can cycle through data on the tiny display.

            He hates it, but I remind him he picked the machine without asking me if I agreed to to the data collection.