After Spying On You, Your Vizio TV Will Ask You to Sue

Authored by tomsguide.com and submitted by thegeezuss

We may not have colonies on Mars and faster-than-light travel yet but, if you have a Vizio TV, you will get a taste of a bizarre future where gadgets turn against its makers after betraying its owners.

Soon, a pop-up informing you that your TV has been spying on you will prompt you to sue its own manufacturer.

Credit: Tom's GuideAll this gadget drama started on November 2015, when journalistic watchdog ProPublica exposed Vizio for illegally using its popular smart TVs to spy on its customers. The secret “feature” recorded what, when, and where its TV users were watchino in order to sell their viewing habits data to advertisers. Then, advertisers could use that data to “find you on your phone and other devices” and target your with advertisement tailored to those habits. Pretty sleazy.

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The company argued that it was innocent and that all data recording was anonymous, not specific to each user, and asked the class action lawsuit to be dismissed. But a California federal judge didn’t buy its arguments two times — in March and July, allowing the legal process to continue.

This was despite the fact that, in February 2017, the company came to a very friendly $2.2 million settlement with the FTC on this investigation.

As part of the legal process against the company, the plaintiffs — lead by the law firm Girard Gibbs — and defendant Vizio agreed to push a notice to all affected smart TVs alerting consumers of what happened and what are their rights to join the class action lawsuit on September 12.

But now there may be a delay: according to The Hollywood Reporter, there are some technical and legal problems that Vizio has to solve before sending the note. This is what the court papers obtained by the publication reportedly say:

“The Parties are developing a class notice program with direct notification to the class through VIZIO Smart TV displays, which requires testing to make sure any TV notice can be properly displayed and functions as intended. The additional time requested will allow the parties to confirm that the notice program proposed in the motion for preliminary approval is workable and satisfies applicable legal standards."

The new target date, according to the plaintiff’s lawyers, is sometime between September 12 and October 3. Now more than ever, if you are a Vizio Smart TV owner, stay tuned.

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Dahti on September 10th, 2018 at 13:27 UTC »

Sweet, looking forward to my check for $.30!

Zebov3 on September 10th, 2018 at 13:01 UTC »

So do I need to reconnect mine to the internet to be a part of the class action or just remember to find it in a month?

EDEN786 on September 10th, 2018 at 12:16 UTC »

TLDR : they made a TV that might be spying/recording you. 2.2Mill agreement with FTC, but part of it they need to advertise the class-action law suit to affected users so they can join the law suit.

Edit:: correction from u/pus_muffin below .. I actually can't be asked to re-read the article so I'm just trusting him.