According to the article I read, they captured the IP address and were generally able to map that to a physical address. With a physical address, or warranty registration filled out by the owner, much of this data would be accessible.no different then what google or amazon does.
How the hell would a tv know these things sex, age, income, marital status, household size, education, and home ownership.
Lets just hope there is a significant price drop on their TV's now.
I want the P75 and I am willing to allow Vizio to film me while I watch Gilmore Girls on Neftlix if they can get the price down to $1,200.70" 4K going for $900 at WalMart
![]()
Also, I should note that this is significantly different than what, say, an Amazon firestick or Google Chromecast do. Those devices obviously log what you watch through the device, but they aren't able to capture other viewing data.no different then what google or amazon does.
How the hell would a tv know these things sex, age, income, marital status, household size, education, and home ownership.
This.Rich Conway said:I hope there's a class action suit over this and they get hammered.
You know those ToS agreements that you blindly agree to are going to get you every time. I seriously doubt that you can get around them for your supposed justice.Rich Conway said:Also, I should note that this is significantly different than what, say, an Amazon firestick or Google Chromecast do. Those devices obviously log what you watch through the device, but they aren't able to capture other viewing data.
For example, Amazon knows I watched Sneaky Pete through the firestick last night. They don't know that my son played an hour of Mario Kart on the Wii. Vizio was capturing the pixels rendered on the screen, so knows everything the TV displayed, regardless of input source. I imagine the lawyers here can provide more detail, but it should be clear that I have no expectation of keeping my firestick viewing choices secret from Amazon, when I literally had to log in to Amazon in order to view them. That's not the case with Vizio; I have every reason to assume that the information displayed on the screen was kept private.
I hope there's a class action suit over this and they get hammered.
They have lots of data on me jerking off then.
There's generally no ToS when purchasing or even installing a TV.You know those ToS agreements that you blindly agree to are going to get you every time. I seriously doubt that you can get around them for your supposed justice.
Good work.There's generally no ToS when purchasing or even installing a TV.