This article is more than
7 year oldSmart TVs are being used to monitor their viewers as they sit in front of them.
Television maker Vizio and a subsidiary will pay millions of dollars in fines to settle allegations that it had been secretly tracking people's viewing habits and then selling that information on.
The data was then used by marketing companies and data brokers for a range of things, including measuring how effective ad campaigns were and whether people watched them.
The settlement announced Monday ends parallel investigations conducted by the state and the Federal Trade Commission into the use of data-collecting technology on Vizio's smart TVs.
The FTC will get $1.5 million and the state will receive $1 million. The state will suspend $300,000 in civil penalties included in its settlement amount if Vizio complies with the agreement.
According to legal documents, Irvine, California-based Vizio and a subsidiary manufactured smart TVs that captured second-by-second information about video displayed on the sets.
Vizio isn't the first smart TV company to have been found spying on its users. In 2015, it emerged that Samsung's smart TVs came with a privacy policy that allowed it to listen in on users while they were watching them, and send that information back to the company's servers.
Newer articles