Vizio settles FTC lawsuit and agrees to get viewer consent before tracking TV habits
Vizio will pay $2.2 million to settle a lawsuit alleging it collected customers’ TV-watching habits without their permission.
The lawsuit was filed by the Federal Trade Commission and
the state of New Jersey. It alleged that, in 2014, Vizio began using
software built into over 11 million smart TVs to capture
“highly-specific, second-by-second information about television
viewing.” Vizio was then said to have worked with another company to
associate demographic information with each household, so that viewing
habits could be paired with information like a viewer’s “sex, age,
income, marital status,” and more.
In addition to the $2.2 million in payments, Vizio will
now have to obtain clear consent from viewers before collecting and
sharing data on their viewing habits. It’ll also have to delete all data
gathered by these methods before March 1st, 2016.
Vizio doesn’t admit fault as part of the settlement, and,
in a statement, said it was “pleased” with the resolution. “Going
forward, this resolution sets a new standard for best industry privacy
practices for the collection and analysis of data collected from today’s
internet-connected televisions and other home devices,” says Jerry
Huang, Vizio’s general counsel. Vizio says it
To some extent, the FTC seems to be trying to make an
example of Vizio here. While the settlement isn’t a huge sum, it
indicates that companies using smart TV software to their advantage and
without getting consumers’ consent will have to answer for their shady
practices.
“The data generated when you watch television can reveal a
lot about you and your household,” Kevin Moriarty, an FTC attorney,
writes in a blog post
about the settlement. “So, before a company pulls up a chair next to
you and starts taking careful notes on everything you watch (and then
shares it with its partners), it should ask if that’s okay with you.”
The article was published on : theverge
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