Samsung TVs stop spying on viewers in Texas. Here’s how to disable ACR anywhere
嗯,用户让我总结这篇文章的内容,控制在100字以内,而且不需要特定的开头。首先,我需要快速浏览文章,抓住主要信息。 文章讲的是三星和德克萨斯州总检察长达成和解,关于智能电视收集和利用观看数据的问题。三星同意在得州停止未经明确同意的数据收集,并修改隐私提示。同时,文章还提到其他电视制造商也被起诉,以及如何禁用ACR技术。 接下来,我需要把这些要点浓缩到100字以内。要确保涵盖三星的和解、停止数据收集、修改隐私提示,以及ACR技术的禁用方法。可能还需要提到其他公司被起诉的情况。 然后,检查一下是否有遗漏的重要信息。比如,Paxton的观点和对消费者的建议是否需要包含进去?考虑到字数限制,可能只能简要提及。 最后,确保语言简洁明了,直接描述内容,不使用任何开头模板。这样就能满足用户的要求了。 </think> Samsung agreed to stop collecting viewing data from Texans without explicit consent and modify privacy prompts after settling a lawsuit with the Texas Attorney General over its ACR technology, which tracks and monetizes TV viewing habits. Other TV manufacturers are also facing similar lawsuits. Users can disable ACR through specific settings on their devices. 2026-3-2 15:1:29 Author: securityboulevard.com(查看原文) 阅读量:3 收藏

Samsung has settled a lawsuit with the Texas Attorney General over how its smart TVs collect and monetize viewing data using Automated Content Recognition (ACR). As part of the settlement, Samsung agreed to stop collecting ACR data from Texans without explicit, informed consent and to rewrite its on‑screen privacy prompts and dialogs.

Texas Attorney General (AG) Paxton stated:

“I commend Samsung for being one of the first smart TV companies in the world to make these important changes.”

The Texas AG sued Samsung and other TV makers (Hisense, Sony, LG, TCL) over ACR-based “mass surveillance programs” monitoring what people watch and building profiles used for advertising and monetization.

ACR works by:

  • Taking tiny samples of the sound or picture from what’s on your screen (a few seconds at a time).
  • Turning those samples into a kind of fingerprint (a compact pattern that uniquely represents that content).
  • Comparing that fingerprint to a giant database of known shows, movies, channels, and ads to find a match.

If it finds a match, the system knows “this TV user is watching Episode X of Show Y at time Z” or “this ad just played on this device.”

Paxton argues that customers did not meaningfully consent to this data collection, which he calls “watchware,” framing it as deliberate monitoring, rather than an accident.

Samsung also faces a federal class action in New York. Plaintiffs claim Samsung TVs track, store, and sell viewing data to companies such as Google and X (Twitter) without informed consent, in violation of the federal Video Privacy Protection Act and various state privacy laws.​

The New York complaint further alleges that Samsung’s ACR records image and audio every 500 ms regardless of source (broadcast, streaming apps, or PC monitor use), and that Samsung’s privacy notice downplays the scope of that data collection by referring to “processing” viewing history.

How to disable ACR

If you’d prefer to limit or disable ACR-style monitoring of your watching behavior, here’s where to look. Menu names may vary slightly depending on the model and year.

Samsung

Samsung has agreed to modify its consent and disclosure practices for Texas residents as part of the settlement. Users elsewhere can manually adjust these settings:

  • Press Home on the remote.
  • Go to Settings → Support → Terms & Privacy → Privacy Choices (or Settings → All Settings → General & Privacy → Terms & Privacy / Privacy Choices).
  • Turn Viewing Information Services off (this is Samsung’s ACR).
  • Optional hardening: In the same menu area, disable Interest-Based Advertising and any Voice Recognition Services if you don’t want voice data sent off‑box.

LG TVs (webOS)

  • Press Settings (gear icon).
  • Go to All Settings → General → System → Additional Settings.
  • Set Live Plus to off (this is LG’s ACR layer).
  • In the same or nearby menu, enable Limit Ad Tracking (or similar option) to reduce ad profiling.

Vizio TVs

  • Press Menu on the remote.
  • Go to System → Reset & Admin.
  • Turn Viewing Data off (this disables Vizio’s ACR and viewing logs).

Sony TVs (Google TV / Android TV)

Many Sony TVs use Samba Interactive TV as the ACR component.

  • Press Home.
  • For newer Google TV models:
    • Go to Settings → All Settings → Privacy; toggle Samba Interactive TV off.​
  • For models using usage‑diagnostics style controls:
    • Go to Settings → Device Preferences → Usage & Diagnostics and turn all reporting off.

This disables the Samba ACR integration and general telemetry used for ad/experience tuning.

Roku TVs (TCL, Hisense, etc. running Roku OS)

  • From the Roku home screen, go to Settings → Privacy.
  • Under Advertising:
    • Uncheck / toggle off Personalize ads (this stops use of your advertising ID for interest‑based ads).
    • Optionally select Reset advertising ID to rotate the ID.​
  • Under Smart TV Experience (if present):
    • Turn off Use info from TV inputs to stop ACR on HDMI and other external sources.​

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*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Malwarebytes authored by Malwarebytes. Read the original post at: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/2026/03/samsung-tvs-stop-spying-on-viewers-in-texas-heres-how-to-disable-acr-anywhere


文章来源: https://securityboulevard.com/2026/03/samsung-tvs-stop-spying-on-viewers-in-texas-heres-how-to-disable-acr-anywhere/
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