it will become like many appliances… You want a dumb tv? Possible, but it will cost you more than a smart one. You want a dumb fridge? Fine, but soon it will cost you more than a ‘smart’ one you can’t even turn on without making an account somewhere and registering your email and phone
Comment on Fresh dystopian hell from Samsung fridges with ads.
inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
To that I say, why in the hell would you buy a smart fridge in the first place? That’s on you for buying something that stupid.
freebee@sh.itjust.works 16 hours ago
SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca 16 hours ago
Same thing with screen ads in new Jeeps. You bought a Jeep, you deserve pain.
FatVegan@leminal.space 16 hours ago
My dad owned a bunch of jeeps from the 90’s to 2005 ish. I never understood how anyone could buy more than one of these pieces of shit.
OhStopYellingAtMe@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
I have a friend who swears by them. Buys one after another of those heaps of junk. I always ask her “how’s your Heep?”
curbstickle@anarchist.nexus 15 hours ago
Because in the 80s they were unstoppable monsters of travel (well late 70s too, I’m talking about the CJ7 here)
SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca 15 hours ago
They went 0-60 in 9 seconds, sideways!
Fredselfish@lemmy.world 16 hours ago
Then connect to the internet? But I think saw on YouTube that they can brick your fridge if you do anything to stop getting ads.
merc@sh.itjust.works 48 minutes ago
In theory a smart fridge could be useful.
If it automatically scanned everything you put inside, it could tell you what ingredients you had if you were planning a recipe. If you were at the store you could know what to buy. It could warn you before something reached its expiry date, or remind you what leftovers were still uneaten. Depending on how much you trusted it, it could learn what you always buy, and add them to your shopping list when you were running low, or even actually order them.
In theory this could reduce food spoilage and wastage, and could save you money in the long term. It requires trust though. Samsung is obviously mistreating users by showing them ads. But, it could be much worse. The fridge could order food that the user didn’t need, or if it ordered food Samsung could strike a deal with one company and always prefer their brands even when there were cheaper options. And, of course, Samsung could sell your buying habits to Google and Meta who would use it to more effectively target you with ads. Or, Samsung could cut a deal with insurance companies to tell them which users had unhealthy eating habits so the insurance company could deny coverage or hike rates.
The big issue here is section 1201 of the DMCA. If that didn’t exist, someone could open up a business installing a new, custom, privacy-centric OS on people’s fridges. But, with section 1201 in place, that’s illegal and you could be thrown in jail for performing that service. Even outside the US laws like that exist because the US insisted on them on condition that otherwise the US would force those countries to pay high tariffs. Of course, now the US is jacking up tariffs regardless. I have no idea why no country has yet repealed their equivalent of section 1201. Whichever country does it first will have a huge advantage.