Vizio to pay $2.2M by FTC

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The concept of companies watching what you are doing on electronic devices isn’t new.  The concept of them taking that data, made anonymous, and selling it to advertisers isn’t, either.  But in 2014, Vizio was caught doing something worse, and subsequently sued for it.  Vizio was caught not only watching what end users were doing while watching TV on their Smart TVs, they were recording what was being done, second by second, and sharing information such as the end user’s IP Address, MAC Address, and other identifying demographics with their advertisers.

Well, today they settled with the FTC for $2.2M, but not for what you would think.  The settlement wasn’t because of the egregious spying and selling of data based on that, but rather their lack of transparency in doing so.   They didn’t make it clear enough in the Terms of Service, which are rarely ever read by the layperson, what their intentions were.  Unlike other companies like Samsung who spelled it out in ToS, Vizio made no indication that this was happening in the Smart TV software, nor did they provide a way to turn it off, and they then gathered information based on IP address of other habits, like where you went shopping on your phone, what games you played on  your computer, and so on.

For more detailed information, you should check out TechCrunch and The Verge.  You can also read the blog post about this on the FTC Website.

My thoughts on this are two fold.  First, holy hell they went WAY too far going so far as to record the IP Address of the Internet connection and then monitoring what ALL Internet Traffic was doing at any particular household, but secondly I’m not surprised.  With the proliferation of a connected everything, smarter devices, and people’s desire to have better working technology that improves their life, this kind of data mining will continue.  Thankfully this FTC settlement sets something of a standard to which all Smart TV manufacturers will have to contend with now, and shows that the consumer’s personally identifiable information should not be collected in such a manner, and that companies and technology doing this needs to be up front and open with the consumer about it.

What are your thoughts?  Will you never buy a Vizio because of this, or do you think that they and the rest of the TV industry have learned the lesson and things will be better?  I’d love to hear you sound off in the comments below or on Twitter, you can find me @geekindad.

By GeekinDad

Having grown up playing Doom II on LAN against my dad at home, I was on a course of Geekdom from early on. Decent, Doom and Wolfenstein 3D were my games of choice as a young one, and had me hooked on PC gaming. I haven’t turned back since. I’ve turned into a slight hardware enthusiast, and am increasingly exceeding the dollar to performance ratio one might consider a value in my gaming rigs. With gaming in my blood, it took me longer than most to find and start reading comics, but at last, in my latter half of my 20’s, I picked up my first few books and make my weekly trips to the shop, chatting with the staff to see what they’ve read, talking about trades I should read, and getting an education in the world of comics on a weekly basis. I also have a website and YouTube channel, where I occasionally put together a stream of consciousness or review a piece of tech I’ve recently purchased or received. Find me on twitter @geekindad so we can chat, you see my ramblings as a dad and football fan, and anything in between.

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