I just finished setting up a custom router with dns ad blocking. Next comes a media player so I can purge this smart TV filth from my household.

Huge shout out to Louis Rossmann and the FUTO communuty contributors, check out the wiki on self-hosted software if you haven’t already.

Wiki link

  • @bananymous@lemmy.ml
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    383 months ago

    Is American football not merely a vehicle through which advertising can be pumped? You’d think the entire sport had been designed from the ground up for such a purpose.

    Four seconds of action, six minutes of commercials….3.6 seconds of action, 47 replays, five minutes of commercials.

    P.S. Smart TVs can eat shit and die.

    • @Godnroc@lemmy.world
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      113 months ago

      I went to a game for the first time a few years ago. I recall the moment where everyone was sitting around and not doing anything because they were waiting for the commercials to finish. It felt like watching actors drop their characters the moment they step out of the spotlight.

      • @Grapho@lemmy.ml
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        23 months ago

        This (and the ridiculous, eye gouging price) is why I’d never go to a UFC event. It’s bad enough when I’m home and I have to go clean the kitchen or fold my laundry for 30 minutes if a fight finishes even slightly early, but having to stand around waiting for ads to finish on a PPV card would turn me into Ted Kaczynski

  • IndescribablySad@threads.net
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    373 months ago

    Disable all internet functionality, set the time to the 1990s to prevent many timers from going off, attach the tv to another device that doesn’t have ads via your cable of choice. But why was your smart tv 1700? Did it have some special features?

  • @buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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    303 months ago

    I made my Smart TV into a dumb TV by never activating the smart TV functions. And then I plugged a relatively cheap computer into it. So I don’t have this kind of problem.

    • @Glitterbomb@lemmy.world
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      223 months ago

      Your grandma does.

      I installed her TV and internet last week. She barely understands the concept of switching TV inputs, and her Roku smart TV doesn’t let you rename inputs from HDMI1 to [ISP NAME] unless the thing is connected to the internet. It also defaults out of the box to show the smart TV bullshit every single time you turn it on, instead of just showing the last used input before the TV turned off. So she’s completely baffled how to watch simple television channels unless I spend 10 minutes reconfiguring this garbage so it’s usable.

      Go visit your grandma, everyone. And reconfigure her smart TV. I’m joking but I’m not. I can only visit so many grandmas per day.

      • @buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I haven’t had a living grandmother in… I don’t even know how many years at this point.

        But the fact of the matter is, the older generations don’t really use Smart TVs, they’re still using Comcast boxes and accessing regular TV. Some of the more tech savvy will engage Netflix or Disney+ but beyond that, it’s doubtful they even know anything beyond those exist.

        • @Glitterbomb@lemmy.world
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          113 months ago

          I’ll reiterate that I’m in a half dozen living rooms every day, and most of them are senior citizens. I’ve been doing this for years. They all have smart TVs, whether they use the features or not.

          I’ll also reiterate that they flat out will not even use a TV sometimes because they’re defeated by the smart TV features that prevent them from getting over to their Comcast box. Did you even read my comment?

          They get suckered by the cheap TV in middle of the aisle at Walmart or Costco and buy three. You can’t even go out and buy a TV that isn’t a smart TV without specifically looking for it. They don’t even know to begin to look for these things.

          Do you think they’re still on an old CRT with a VCR hooked up via RCA? They had to go down some weird upgrade rabbit hole that they still don’t fully understand because they ended up with a DVD of some classic movie, went and got a DVD player only to find out they didn’t have HDMI ports so now they had to go buy some garbage TV thats subsidized by advertising companies. Again, I’ve seen this exact scenario play out a hundred times.

          The fact of the matter is that your fix reeks of ‘I got mine’ energy, and it doesn’t fix anything. Large swaths of people will still get these ads in their faces and these companies won’t stop. Quite the opposite, they’ll keep looking for more ways to fuck their customers.

          • @buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            I’ll also reiterate that they flat out will not even use a TV sometimes because they’re defeated by the smart TV features that prevent them from getting over to their Comcast box.

            Yes I did read your comment and here you just proved my point. And my solution was not for old people. Point I was making in my comment was that old people are already lost cause. They don’t understand technology and therefore will not benefit from it. So yeah they get suckered into buying these TVs and then they never use them properly or they get somebody younger to set them up so that they can use either Netflix or Disney+ since those are the only things they know of to watch whatever programs they can pull up or they pay someone to get a cable box plugged in and surf like they did in the '80s, '90s, and early 2000s.

            My “fix” is for younger people, twenties to '50s, who don’t want to deal with the ad-pocalypse. I have been able to set it up multiple times with various sized computers right down to a Raspberry Pi. And yeah, of some ain’t tech savvy enough to plug a computer into an HDMI port and use it to watch stuff on their TV, I have no sympathies. We live in a digital age and if you’re younger than '50 years old and can’t work a computer, you’re dead out of luck when it comes to digital entertainment and you might as well get used to having ads shoved in your face the rest of your life.

    • @_stranger_@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I have a very old 4K Toshiba TV with a built in “smart browser” that, due to me never plugging into the Internet, has a home page with news about how well Obama’s doing in the polls for being a relatively unknown junior senator.

    • @CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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      63 months ago

      Which only works for now. They’ve already gotten you to be ok with the upcharge price for the “smart” hardware. Soon they’re going to require online activation for “reasons”. So choosing to not connect it won’t work. And they’ll do regular ad connection checks and if it fails to update ads after so much time the TV will prompt an error to please correct the network.

      Hate it all you want, it’s going to happen.

      • ☂️-
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        33 months ago

        It doesn’t need to happen if we actually do something about this hate.

          • ☂️-
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            53 months ago

            organize.

            is a matter of pushing advertisement and privacy restrictions

            • @buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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              23 months ago

              Yeah all that bluster in Congress about TikTok collecting people’s data and yet not one single privacy bill materialized anywhere. Not even from Democrats. It’s almost like the privacy concerns were not even real.

  • @Dickarus@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    A cheap computer/laptop. HDMI cable. Ublock origin (sprinkle some sponserblock and privacy badger in there). A TV that is never connected to the internet. Voila. No ads. None. Zilch. Zero. Ad free.

    Streaming platforms that have gone to ad supported formats make me laugh because it’s just a 3-5 second black screen, not the ad, and it’s back to the content. Been doing it for decades. Don’t sit there and get reamed by their bullshit.

      • @46_and_2@lemmy.world
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        83 months ago

        Plenty of 4k with HDR on Real Debrid. Or even better quality and bitrate ripped from BRs, in the open waters.

      • @WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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        43 months ago

        Buy a smart TV box like Apple TV or Nvidia Shield. You can get full quality streaming with some ads but not nearly as bad as the software that’s built into some of these TVs.

      • @Dickarus@lemmy.world
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        43 months ago

        HDMI 2.1 can support 4k. Find a ship that doesn’t sink. Voila. No ads. Zilch. Zero. Nada. No HDR? Better than a single second of an ad.

      • shastaxc
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        13 months ago

        It’ll be 4k if you install the windows app for the service or watch in Edge.

        • @notfromhere@lemmy.ml
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          73 months ago

          Detailed instructions for things like this will need to documented. It starts with ads… does it evolve into 1984? Who knows, but it seems more likely in light of recent events.

          • @YerbaYerba@lemm.ee
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            23 months ago

            I agree. I could see manufacturers add anti tamper features that could brick the device if opened if people started doing this anyway.

            • qaz
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              03 months ago

              That’s unlikely, the additional R&D cost probably won’t weigh up to the costs incurred by the small minority that removes it.

      • @CedarA64@lemm.ee
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        93 months ago

        Don’t buy a TV anymore. Seriously though with the direction things have been going in the “tech world” for the last couple years (maybe even decade) it is probably better to start adjusting to some level of digital minimalism. For some of us it will become a necessity for financial reasons anyway…

  • @Waldschrat@lemmy.world
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    203 months ago

    Return it. If you hold on to it (even if you block the ads and all) it will signal the manufacturer, that this practice is fine.

    • @girsaysdoom@sh.itjust.works
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      13 months ago

      Sounds like they might have the capability to just network block the device from their router too. At least that’s what I do, just in case someone tries to use it.

    • @grue@lemmy.world
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      13 months ago

      And then buy a non-smart TV instead. At least one company, Sceptre, still makes them. (I don’t want to make it seem like I’m shilling for a particular brand, but I genuinely don’t know of any other options, aside from commercial signage displays.)

      • @quediuspayu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        13 months ago

        Commercial displays might be the answer, all the smart bullshit goes against their use case so they need a way to go around it in case they still have it, and every brand have them.

        Last time I looked into it they were more expensive and had to be bought through an agent but that was a few years ago, thing might have changed.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          13 months ago

          Again, the brand I mentioned in the previous comment is a consumer-oriented one, that you can simply buy off Amazon etc., that still sells dumb TVs. I’d only suggest resorting to commercial displays if you’re boycotting that brand for some reason.

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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    113 months ago

    It will be a dark day indeed when I allow my TV to connect to the internet. These things are glorified monitors.

  • @bluelander@lemmy.ml
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    83 months ago

    I bought a new TV last year after my Hisense kicked the bucket and had a similar experience.

    Not sure if it applies to your situation, but I just factory reset my TV, never enabled wifi, and hooked up a smart device I had lying around (Nvidia Shield). Now it all works great and if the smart functions upset me I can throw just the smart TV part in the trash and go back to my VCR.

    • @grue@lemmy.world
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      23 months ago

      You have to reject smart TVs at the time of purchase, or manufacturers think this shit is okay and will keep escalating until even an Nvidia Shield won’t save you.

      • @bluelander@lemmy.ml
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        13 months ago

        Unfortunately options are becoming increasingly limited. My guess is that they’re making more money cramming in ads for people that tolerate it than they are losing money from people who refuse it.

  • Richard
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    3 months ago

    Get a cheap computer and connect the tv to it; get a mouse and bluetooth keyboard or an air mouse if your want to; install kodi perhaps, or just have your bare desktop. Problem solved

    Disconnect the tv to wifi too.

    • @TheOSINTguy@sh.itjust.works
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      23 months ago

      There are some cheap Bluetooth TV remotes so if you want to take some time out of your day, there’s a few Linux distros that ship with similar GUI to some TV’s.

    • @GooseFinger@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      93 months ago

      Yeah I guess the superbowl is soon, there’s another row of football ads one or two rows up. I’ll remind myself that I paid for the TV, the electricity to run it, and the bandwidth to connect it, yet I’m still shown full screen ads first thing when I turn my TV on. And I don’t even watch football. And I can’t disable it.

      Corporate America and gargle my balls