Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a suit on Monday against Samsung, Sony, LG, TCL, and Hisense, claiming in a press release that they "have been unlawfully collecting personal data through Automated Content Recognition (“ACR”) technology.”

Paxton goes on to label ACR as “an uninvited, invisible digital invader,” and in one of the five separately filed suits, he calls Samsung TVs “a mass surveillance system.”

  • iopq@lemmy.world
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    17 小时前

    Why can’t you guys take a win? Just say it’s good Texas is doing this

    • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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      2 分钟前

      Because the people making these claims have an extremely consistent record of siding with rich donors instead of their citizens. They lie have a consistent track record of being caught lying. Trust is earned, and Ken Paxton has consistently done the opposite of that.

    • MasterBlaster@lemmy.world
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      5 小时前

      It is because of who is running Texas. We don’t believe them. It’s either kabuki, or a means to extract something from the corporations while blowing smoke up our asses.

    • pikl@lemmy.world
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      17 小时前

      Because the likely outcome will be a shady backroom business deal where they take a cut or just a payoff and you’ll never hear about it again. It’s Texas.

      • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        15 小时前

        No. The likely outcome is this. I’m going to use fake numbers for the sake of demonstrating a concept.

        Samsung spies on you. From the data, they can harvest $500 million dollars throughout Texas tv watchers sending info back to South Korea.

        Texas says “Hey! Whoa! You can’t do that! You better stop or we’ll fine you $20,000 dollars!”

        Samsung says “Ok”, and keeps doing it. Pays the fine, and takes it to court. They lose the case, but cost Texas $15,000 of court costs just to win. Then they keep doing it.

        Now Texas thinks twice about charging the fee, because last time they only got $5,000 after defending themselves in court.

        Meanwhile Samsung just views it as the cost of doing business. And carries on.