LG says it'll let people delete the Copilot icon. But TV chatbots aren't going away.
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considering how many android tv's are basically linux malware ddos boxes now i expect every smart tv to not let you use the tuner until it is online to get a os update and will lock it self if it can't update. android, steam os, chrome os, and other embedded linux devices removed the security the os had from being barly used it also helprs that macos is running BSD and the virus code can be easy to port modern mac malware to linux. this is the year of the linux botnet.How long do you reckon it’s going to be before TV’s start randomly popping up text in the middle of of watching saying “This TV isn’t connected to the Internet, please connect it to install important updates.”
LOL. The mere fact that you "launch... a few curated apps" and view those icons that you don't pay attention to means LG gets something, so, no, not 100% fail.It doesn't change the fact that nothing that LG does in an effort to monetize me beyond having purchased the TV years ago will work. They have not made a penny from me since then, and that is a 100% verifiable fact. I don't use webOS for anything beyond launching a few curated apps. I don't pay attention to anything else that shows up on the webOS screen. I won't be clicking on any CoPilot button, let alone even notice that it is there. So if LG's business model is to try to recoup the cost of the hardware through crap like AI, they will fail on this customer. Completely. 100% fail.
Indeed, TVs have never been this cheap. I bet a lot of people would be willing to pay extra to avoid all the internet crap. This resembles force feeding.Those aren’t subsidies. You already paid for the TV, this is just pure profit.
When I tried to set up an older (LG? Samsung?) smart tv with an IP address, but no gateway address, rendering it only able to communicate with my local network but not beyond, it considered the configuration invalid. Wonder if that's the case today?They're only open if you connect them to the internet. The best thing you can do with any so-called "smart" TV is to leave it disconnected.
Yet somehow Youtube can't use something like ACR to stop the same fraudulent "health" ads from being sponsored by a constantly shifting array of bogus companies, often from Brazil for some reason.The typical consumer almost certainly doesn't understand any of the problems that come with Smart TVs. Go ahead and walk around Best Buy or Walmart and ask people shopping TVs if they know what ACR is and let us know the numbers. Believe it or not, a lot of people simply have not the time or energy to invest in keeping up with all this underhanded bullshit and simply buy what's in their budget that suits their current needs. Want to blame someone? Blame LG, Microsoft, hell blame your legislators for not doing enough to hold them accountable.
Bollocks.People don't want to pay what the device would cost without the subsidies. Look at TVs sold as commercial signs for a taste.
People don't want to pay what the device would cost without the subsidies. Look at TVs sold as commercial signs for a taste.
The displays sold as commercial screens are quite different. They’re designed and warranted to operate 24/7 for multiple years, which domestic TVs are not.Ars ran a story on this last week, and there are definite drawbacks to that. https://meincmagazine.com/gadgets/2025/12/the-ars-technica-guide-to-dumb-tvs/
Copilot is metastasizing. It never was benign in the first place.
While I share your sentiment I feel there is a big difference between a device you buy with the express purpose of having an AI assistant and a device you buy for some other purpose that has been bundled with one. Furthermore. if you like AI assistants you probably want only one of them to manage all your devices rather than each device having a different AI assistant.You lost me at Alexa. Sure, it's a couple generations older than Copilot or whatever, but it's still a thing that spies on you and sends your voice and your data to Big Tech data centers where you have no control over what happens to it. No thank you.
Disclaimer: I worked on Alexa, briefly, in 2017.
While I share your sentiment I feel there is a big difference between a device you buy with the express purpose of having an AI assistant and a device you buy for some other purpose that has been bundled with one. Furthermore. if you like AI assistants you probably want only one of them to manage all your devices rather than each device having a different AI assistant.
They're only open if you connect them to the internet. The best thing you can do with any so-called "smart" TV is to leave it disconnected.
“If anyone here is in advertising or marketing, kill yourself. Just a little thought, I’m just trying to plant seeds… Kill yourself… There’s no rationalization for what you do, and you are Satan’s little helpers, okay? Kill yourselves. Seriously… There’s no fucking joke coming… You are Satan’s spawn filling the world with vile and garbage, you are fucked… Kill yourself. It’s the only way to save your fucking soul. Kill yourself. Planting seeds… I know all the marketing people are going ‘he’s just doing a joke’; there’s no joke here whatsoever. Suck a tailpipe, fucking hang yourself…. I don’t care how you do it.”
How did they make a profit before the advent of annoying stuff like this?Sorry, but that's not how the economics of TV manufacturing works.
The profit from third party income, from data brokers, from streaming services for placement, and for other applications (such as Copilot), absolutely dwarfs the potential profit from the hardware, and allows the TV manufacturers to sell the TVs below cost.
Note: I worked for a TV manufacturer for a while, so that's solid information.
That would be interesting for sure, I used to work for a telco and people used to pop open smart meters and steal sim cards from them all the time.Technically, yes, but remember that this is all about scrounging extra profit. TVs are very price competitive and they’re not putting a 5G modem in, getting it certified, etc. if they don’t have to because that adds extra parts to each unit which would mostly be unnecessary. Getting in bed with Comcast, et al. uses the Wi-Fi hardware they were already shipping and I’d bet that they can find a revenue sharing agreement since all of the parties involved want to know what you’re watching and could not care less about your privacy.
It really is that simple.Don‘t connect TV to your WiFi. Problem instantly solved.
I have a similar setup. An older LG TV bought for the display quality only. It is five-seven years old. An amplifier is the only thing plugged directly into that. Then a sat receiver, Apple TV and a BluRay player plugged into the amp, all HDMI. So no direct communication from the TV to the world. Or the amp which is 10+ years old.that’s why I’m using Apple TV with my LG TV…
Yeah I think dim-bulb libertarians forget—or never understood (edit: or understand and are lying)—that “free markets” REQUIRE transparency.People do like the subsidies but part of that is also the lack of alternatives or disclosure. If you had two units side by side on the shelf and one had a sticker disclosing that it cost $50 less because it logged everything you watch and had a 5 year support lifetime before the apps broke, people might have second thoughts.
Kinda gives you an idea of how many people actually want AI in their TV. So many that they have to secretly install it and not let you remove it.
Not being able to tell if you are being watched is Really Bad. So lets have AI watch you constantly. -- all"The telescreen received and transmitted simultaneously. Any sound that Winston made, above the level of a very low whisper, would be picked up by it; moreover, so long as he remained within the field of vision which the metal plaque commanded, he could be seen as well as heard. There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment." --1984
They're only open if you connect them to the internet. The best thing you can do with any so-called "smart" TV is to leave it disconnected.
No, full stop. You're spreading nonsense.all tv's do that stock now thats why all HDMI cables have Ethernet on them sony if you don't connect the tv directly will use the internet from any connected boxes to get updates