A class action lawsuit argues that marketing materials promise reliable performance and ongoing improvements through updates that actually ruined consumers' TVs.
If the updates are actually GOOD, we’ll be happy installing them, personally. We do updates on our Linux box just fine.
Provided that said “security” updates aren’t actually “security against you, the owner, from running your own software on the device” (see: game consoles).
If I were talking just about devices I myself use, I would say yes, get rid of all forced updates, but unfortunately, smart TVs are not bought only by the technically adept. (You should see my mother trying to use hers, and given her age and general incomprehension of technology I doubt her understanding is going to improve.) Their devices still have to be patched to keep the botnets from going after the rest of us. I don’t particularly like forced updates, but for security updates on consumer devices they sometimes are the lesser of two evils.
No, just don’t force the updates.
If the updates are actually GOOD, we’ll be happy installing them, personally. We do updates on our Linux box just fine.
Provided that said “security” updates aren’t actually “security against you, the owner, from running your own software on the device” (see: game consoles).
– Frost
If I were talking just about devices I myself use, I would say yes, get rid of all forced updates, but unfortunately, smart TVs are not bought only by the technically adept. (You should see my mother trying to use hers, and given her age and general incomprehension of technology I doubt her understanding is going to improve.) Their devices still have to be patched to keep the botnets from going after the rest of us. I don’t particularly like forced updates, but for security updates on consumer devices they sometimes are the lesser of two evils.