Not even your kitchen is safe from ads after Samsung's new update for its refrigerators
(www.androidauthority.com)
from throws_lemy@lemmy.nz to tech@programming.dev on 17 Sep 16:22
https://lemmy.nz/post/28288189
from throws_lemy@lemmy.nz to tech@programming.dev on 17 Sep 16:22
https://lemmy.nz/post/28288189
Imagine paying top dollar for a brand-new high-end refrigerator only to be greeted with ads on the door display. Sounds like a nightmare? Unfortunately, this nightmare is coming true for Samsung refrigerator owners with the latest update rolling out to their fridges.
threaded - newest
On the upside, the things only work for a couple of years, so if you made the mistake of buying one of these stupid things, you’ll have the opportunity to upgrade to a dumb fridge soon!
man shit like this makes me glad that my state has a forced warranty on purchases. If my fridge failed after 2 years if I didn’t have that protection I would be livid.
I'm surprised they can still sell fridges. They have long had a terrible quality reputation, but still people keep buying them.
We all knew this was coming the first time they put a screen on an appliance. Surprised it took so long.
I used to be pretty neutral about unnecessary screens and internet connections on things. When they started putting connected screens in refrigerators, I was like, “I don’t get it, but it doesn’t really harm me.”
Then the proliferation of screens in cars made me a little grumpy. I want knobs and buttons for safety reasons (and to some extent because they’re just nicer to use).
Then the requirement for so many things to be controlled via app made me upset. I don’t want your stupid dishwasher with a stupid app. I’ve had too many live services shut down and kill a feature to be willing to rely on your app to wash my dishes.
Then screens being badly designed made me livid. Our oven has a capacitive touch screen for control, placed directly above the door. Fingers are capacitive, but do you know what else is? STEAM. Which is what comes out of an OVEN any time you open it.
But ads in my kitchen would make me practically murderous. I’ve done a lot of work to keep ads out of my life overall. I know what I’ve signed up for with some free stuff, but if I pay for it, it better not be trying to rent-seek me without my consent (and some kind of remuneration). The fact that there isn’t even an ad-free option in a lot of cases makes it even worse.
The forced intrusion of ads into every facet of life makes me ever more anti-ad in reaction. I’m getting to the point of sitting on the front porch with a shotgun in my lap, warning ads to get off my lawn if they know what’s good for them. They’d beam ads onto the moon if it wouldn’t be too small to read, but the idea of ads on my fridge makes me want to burn down billboards.
I should’ve been less ok with it at the start.
“I should’ve been less ok with it at the start” to your credit you recognize that now. Many people are still oblivious and if you point it out they just double down.
I feel the same way. I do everything I can to make my life an ad-free experience, even if that means I miss out on certain things.
And the unnecessary apps can take a hike, too.
When I buy a product these days, one of the key requirements I look for is the ability to use all the features without needing an app.
I don’t want a neck fan with bluetooth, or an oven with monthly firmware updates or a dishwasher where certain functions only work when you have a cloud account
I don’t want to see your ads, and you aren’t having any telemetry from me. Get
off my lawnout of my life.Have to say though, my almost-ad-free existence has made me realise how pervasive advertisements are, and how accepting of them we have become as a society. My dad still watches broadcast TV packed with ads, and while that was normal to me as a child I now find it almost unbearable any time I visit.
Why should corporations get to shove 5 minutes of their garbage into my brain for every 15 minutes of content? My answer is they don’t, and I’m not going to subject myself to it ever again.
Jeff Geerling’s video about that experience crystalized my feelings about it, and is probably why I used “dishwasher” in my original comment. I didn’t know he also had a blog version, thanks.
Yeah, my mom will occasionally send screenshots of her phone or hand it to me for tech support, and I’m horrified at how many ads she has. Home screen widgets with ads. Apps with full screen ads before every page. APP NOTIFICATIONS WITH ADS.
Burn it all down.
Imagine being dumb enough to buy a fridge with a screen in it, and then on top of that hooking it to the internet.
I could see a use for a screen on my fridge. Display my daily calendar, weather (I have a MagicMirror in my kitchen for this, but putting on the fridge would save space). However it needs to be for me, not for someone else.
There’s the problem. Ads are for the benefit of others.
@the_riviera_kid@lemmy.world @throws_lemy@lemmy.nz
Just like there are virtually no more brand-new non-smart TVs to be purchased (exceptions are getting increasingly rare), I can foresee a (not so distant) future where there are no more brand-new non-smart fridges, so consumers would need to purchase either the brand-new smart fridges, or trying to find increasingly-scarce used appliances (while they still work and can be fixed when they eventually get broken, because, you know, it relies on spare parts).
Also, I can see governments allied to corporation interests (it's called "lobbying") using the flag of "protecting the environment" (it's called greenwashing and it got nothing to do with actually protecting the environment) to push laws requiring people to ditch their old appliances, similarly on how governments have been using the flag of "protecting the children" in order to push laws requiring people to disclose their faces/IDs to access anything they deem "adult" (not just adult entertainment).
For example: governments around the globe start decreeing "it's now illegal to power on old refrigerators as they don't meet the new environmental requirements"... we see how those laws spread across multiple countries, see this ID/face law: UK, then Australia, France, among other countries and some USian states.
And the same moral fallacy will happen if people started to complain about the ads on fridges: they'll face something in the lines "Don't you think of the environment? Are you pro-pollution?". Again, it would have little (if anything) to do with environment (just like multi-national laws requiring ID for accessing internet content has little (if anything) to do with children), it's just the frog used by scorpions.
Yeah. Future is made of big corporations (General Electric, Samsung, Google, Microsoft, etc) and governments (no matter their political leanings, for it's just their current circensis to gaslight people), long married, seeing 1984 and Cyberpunk as handbooks.
Yet people attack other people (e.g. your statement that "dumb people buy a fridge with a screen in it" is an attack on other consumers as if they were the ones to blame for this problem in the first place) instead of pointing to the actual common threat.
You don’t have to connect these things to the internet. I have a smart tv and I use it to watch tv from another device. The smart tv isn’t connected to my network.
Just wait until only ad-serving devices get certified to connect via HDMI 5
Repeat after me: we don’t our kitchen appliances to be connected to internet.
Please don’t the appliances to the internet
I am not correcting my comment.
Speak for yourself. My 20 year old dumb fridge is going to outlive me
I would never buy an appliance with an internet connection.
My home came with (dumb) Samsung appliances and they’re miserable pieces of shit. I cannot recommend strongly enough to look elsewhere when you’re making an appliance purchase. No matter the cost difference it’s worth it, trust me.