Business Hisense TVs force owners to watch intrusive ads when switching inputs, visiting the home screen, or even changing channels - Practice infuriates consumers, brand denies wrongdoing.

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Hardware and software laden with ads have, unfortunately, become part and parcel of modern life, but there are occasions when the hunt for revenue goes too far. One of those cases comes from Hisense, known across Western markets as a budget electronics brand. The firm's TV sets have repeatedly come under fire for forcing non-skippable ads when switching inputs, turning the TV on, navigating to the home screen, and even when switching channels — all changes that took effect unilaterally after purchase, reportedly even for users who had all ad-related options disabled.

The affected models are mostly but not exclusively lower-end units with Hisense's VIDAA operating system, recently rebranded as Home OS. The vast majority of reports come from Hisense TV owners, but we saw at least one such complaint about a Toshiba set. The operating system is also licensed by Schneider, Akai, and Loewe, among multiple other brands.

This issue came to light recently due to press coverage, but it dates back at least a year, and possibly three, depending on how you count. The earliest notable report dates to 2022, when a user spotted an ad option in their input selection menu. These complaints have gotten more frequent with time, with some people noticing they were forced to watch ads when they turned on their sets. Reports from the last two weeks display the more aggressive tactic of forcing ads when changing TV inputs. Spanish outlets El Español and La Razón covered reports that users were being delivered ads when simply changing channels, too

The situation gets sketchier when reading through user discussions of how to avoid this madness-making behavior. Most suggestions for avoiding the ads are predictable, such as changing the TV's DNS servers or disconnecting it from the internet entirely. Still, a common solution is to contact Hisense support with the TV's unique ID at the seemingly Australian address service.tv.au@hisense.com.

Users who contacted support via email reported that the ads were disabled on their sets, which raises the question of whether Hisense is simply managing delivery on the ad server side or has deeper access to the TVs in question. Additionally, while a sufficiently motivated or technically minded user will forge all the way through this route, it's reasonable to expect that the public at large would grudgingly accept the ads if the sets are outside their store's return window.

Then there's the matter of the location of these incidents. Most reports seem to come from British and Spanish users, but we also found a German-language post and screenshots of a TV set in German. La Razón dug into this matter and published a statement from Hisense that arguably raises more questions than it answers.

Hisense says the ads did not stop owners from "using their devices normally" (a fact reiterated three times) and that the ads were part of "spot tests within the Spanish market," meant to "evaluate certain advertising formats linked to free content within the platform itself."

Given that user reports span multiple countries and a wide time frame, and that Hisense has an Australian email address that answers customer queries on the subject, the situation looks as clear-cut as the circular economy around AI investments.

As far as we can tell, the list of countries from which complaints originate is part of a list of nations covered by an advertising agreement between VIDAA and Teads. The entire statement from Hisense follows; note the translation is our own.

"Regarding the recently-published information about the alleged inclusion of mandatory advertising in Hisense television sets, the company wishes to clarify that in no circumstance did its devices force users to watch ads to use them normally.
The aforementioned situation is exclusive to a spot test performed in the Spanish market within the scope of the VIDAA platform, the television sets' operating system. This test's objective was to evaluate certain advertising formats linked to free content within the platform itself.

In no circumstance did the test affect the standard functionality of the device nor did it limit access to its main features. The users could and can continue to normally use all HDMI inputs, external devices, consoles, subscription streaming apps, or standard broadcasts without any type of interruption or obligation to watch advertisements.

This was a temporary and finalized market test. The aforementioned advertising format has now been removed from Spain. Hisense maintains its commitment to a quality, transparent user experience, based on freedom of choice, guaranteeing that the usage of the television set and its main features are not conditional on watching advertisements."


While Hisense's statement suggests this "test" was regionally limited, the ongoing complaints about intrusive ads on its TVs suggest that the presence or absence of those ads is more widespread and longer-lasting than claimed. In any event, users seeking a less burdensome TV-watching experience might want to steer clear of Hisense's hardware, as they risk unpleasant surprises when performing basic tasks on their sets.

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There isn't anything to watch on cable or dish these days. Just buy a large monitor instead.
Unless you like infinity "home renovation" shows where most of the show is the celebrity headline "renovator" wandering around some affluent woman's home babbling about how to make it so much better and 5 minutes of the show is dedicated to quick shots of the guys doing the actual work. The only reasons people buy a 110 inch smart TV these days is to watch sports, usually American style football, or to watch old movies via streaming.
 
You bought a smart [thing].
QED You are the blackest retard gorilla nigger to exist on the planet.

You get what you fucking deserve. Now stand up and yell "McDonalds".
 
Smartest thing you could do, wherever you live. It's pretty cheap to set up as well.
Block ad lookups at the DNS level, and these smart TVs have all the local benefits from being networked without the corpo intrusion.
 
Hardware and software laden with ads have, unfortunately, become part and parcel of modern life
For you.

>turn on tv. See ad
>change channel. See ad
>watch show. See ad
>turn off tv. See ad
>get food from the fridge. See ad
>open up browser. See ad
>open magazine. See ad
>start game. See ad
>drive car. See ad
>ride public transportation. See ad

What the fuck is the point anymore?
Skill issue.

Smartest thing you could do, wherever you live. It's pretty cheap to set up as well.
Block ad lookups at the DNS level, and these smart TVs have all the local benefits from being networked without the corpo intrusion.
Or just don't buy retarded Internet Of Things garbage.

I got two 60-something inch "dumb" tvs for $100 and $0 respectively and plug them into my PC with an HDMI cable and stream shit in-browser with ublock or locally hosted in VLC. Aside from the one week a year when youtube rolls out new bullshit for the adblockers to catch up to I haven't seen an ad on a device I own since 2008. I'm not even a linux fag, I just don't buy dumb shit that offers me nothing for ten times the price of old shit that does what I want.
 
Hate how everything has ads up the ass. Hoard old tech. That old CRT monitor is only there to let you view stuff in it, not and try and turn you into a paypig.

Absolutely cancerous.
 
The old junkheap TV that's been collecting dust in your garage in 20 years is going to be your one remaining possession that gives you any reprieve whatsoever from the seemingly endless onslaught of ads and propaganda. Someday it will become too much too bear, you will plug that TV in, and for a brief moment remember how things used to be.

Mark my fucking words.
 
The old junkheap TV that's been collecting dust in your garage in 20 years is going to be your one remaining possession that gives you any reprieve whatsoever from the seemingly endless onslaught of ads and propaganda. Someday it will become too much too bear, you will plug that TV in, and for a brief moment remember how things used to be.

Mark my fucking words.
I am beating a dead horse at this point but tech companies do not understand how willing I am to just go without their products and services. They fucked up social media and I stopped using it, they fucked up TV and I stopped watching it, they fucked up video games and I stopped playing them, and every time my life has gotten a little better for it. I visit two sites and this is one of them and the other is youtube and youtube is on thin ice. The only nonessential apps on my phone are for navigating hiking trails and playing locally hosted audiobooks. These "people" vastly overestimate how attached I am to any of their bullshit. There will never be a reprieve from the onslaught because I do not experience the onslaught because the moment I can't block ads is the moment I stop using a product or service, there will never ever come a point where I am willing to tolerate it. There is very little left they could offer me that would be preferable to just going outside.
 
For you.


Skill issue.


Or just don't buy retarded Internet Of Things garbage.

I got two 60-something inch "dumb" tvs for $100 and $0 respectively and plug them into my PC with an HDMI cable and stream shit in-browser with ublock or locally hosted in VLC. Aside from the one week a year when youtube rolls out new bullshit for the adblockers to catch up to I haven't seen an ad on a device I own since 2008. I'm not even a linux fag, I just don't buy dumb shit that offers me nothing for ten times the price of old shit that does what I want.
People keep saying this but even the lowest end shitty tvs are now filled with this garbage. And even the high end quality tvs are filled with this garbage.

The only way to not deal with this is to not use new tech.
 
I am beating a dead horse at this point but tech companies do not understand how willing I am to just go without their products and services. They fucked up social media and I stopped using it, they fucked up TV and I stopped watching it, they fucked up video games and I stopped playing them, and every time my life has gotten a little better for it. I visit two sites and this is one of them and the other is youtube and youtube is on thin ice. The only nonessential apps on my phone are for navigating hiking trails and playing locally hosted audiobooks. These "people" vastly overestimate how attached I am to any of their bullshit. There will never be a reprieve from the onslaught because I do not experience the onslaught because the moment I can't block ads is the moment I stop using a product or service, there will never ever come a point where I am willing to tolerate it. There is very little left they could offer me that would be preferable to just going outside.
You and I are two kindred spirits cut from the same cloth, except rather than going hiking and listening to audiobooks instead I am quite passionate about independent comics and sci-fi paperbacks from 30+ years ago, well and truly far before the real rot began to set in. There are thousands of books, albums, video games, and films made before things went to shit and I regret that I will not be able to experience all of them in my lifetime, but it does at least soothe me to know that despite how awful Current Year becomes I will never run out of things to enjoy and share with the people who also care about shit like that, and no LGBTQIAP faggots or their kike puppeteers can take that from me because I also buy physical copies of everything I want to experience.
 
I plugged in crt for first time in 15-20 years to play snes and I could feel the beneficial rays my body didn't even realize it had been missing! Probably what's wrong with kids these days.

Also no ads. Also no channels but whatever.
 
Smartest thing you could do, wherever you live. It's pretty cheap to set up as well.
Block ad lookups at the DNS level, and these smart TVs have all the local benefits from being networked without the corpo intrusion.
This will not save you with DNS-over-Https.
 
I feel like I'm the only sane person in the world sometimes. An ad has never convinced me to buy anything since I was a child. If you interrupt me with an ad, I hate you, and your product.

Yet, it obviously works, or else it wouldn't keep happening. There are enough people out there who only bought X product not because it was good, and they did the bare minimum of looking up reviews, but because they saw an ad for it.
 
I feel like I'm the only sane person in the world sometimes. An ad has never convinced me to buy anything since I was a child. If you interrupt me with an ad, I hate you, and your product.

Yet, it obviously works, or else it wouldn't keep happening. There are enough people out there who only bought X product not because it was good, and they did the bare minimum of looking up reviews, but because they saw an ad for it.
I feel the same. An advert has never persuaded me to buy the specific product being advertised. That said, I don't own loads of material possessions. I have what I need and use what I have.

If I find I need something, I'll look up reviews and research companies. I favour domestically made stuff where I can get it, but I mostly go off in person recommendations where I can get them. But advertising has no positive effect on me at all.
 
I feel like I'm the only sane person in the world sometimes. An ad has never convinced me to buy anything since I was a child. If you interrupt me with an ad, I hate you, and your product.

Yet, it obviously works, or else it wouldn't keep happening.
Unless you're a nigger or intelligence equivalent, ads will almost never make you look and think "WAOW! COOL AD! I GOTTA CONSUME THIS PRODUCT RIGHT FUCKIN' NOW!" In $CURRENT_YEAR where choices and bootlegs are aplenty, the way a brand can win is by making you aware that it exists, then pretending it's the only choice in that product category that matters. If you ever thought "Shit, I need to buy $UNFAMILIAR_THING. $COMMONLY_SHILLED_BRAND makes these products, right? I'll just get one from them", they won. Marketing teams are also very aware that many people use ad-blocking, so they infest mainstream social media with guerilla marketing and astroturfing that is totally real genuine heckin' wholesome human people giving their honest opinions.

Also, if you're a young white male, marketing research has determined that you are the least likely group to consume and be influenced by ads. The ads are designed for children and low-IQ melanated individuals who buy products on impulse, they won't appeal to you.
 
This will not save you with DNS-over-Https.
You can find lists of DoH addresses that can be blocked. But the easiest and most surefire way is to simply never allow the device any sort of network access. Never plug a network cable into it, deny the MAC address any form of internet access in your router's parental controls, and if you're running Pi Hole as your DHCP server (or your own DHCP server in general that isn't your router), then you can toss dhcp-host=<MAC_ADDR>,ignore in a conf file in /etc/dnsmasq.d. Then the stupid device will never even get an IP address.

And if you really wanna be sure, just find the wifi module and snip the leads or remove it entirely.

Bottom line is that with better hardware to connect to a display, there is never any good reason to allow it any form of network access whatsoever. And I don't feel bad about buying a new TV, either. If the claims are true that "smart" software heavily subsidizes the price of the device by allowing constant tracking and data-mining, by preventing this functionality from ever working, I'm actually costing the manufacturer money. (I should also mention that I don't live in a bug hive, so there's also no way for it to glom onto a neighbor's wifi without my knowledge.)
 
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Have your network setup with nextdns. or use adguard home. Either way, use them to block dns requests for ads and trackers.
Or a more simple idea: only connect your tv to internet when necessary. I think most tv makes will still allow you to do firmware updates through usb. use a 3rd party device for streaming. Or go full pirate and pirate everything. Use kodi to play files.
Why the fucking fuck should a fucking TV need a God damn update? It's a fucking TV!

If you buy a TV that ever requires an update to work, you are part of the God damn problem.

"Well, I have to update it to make it work online!" IT DOESNT NEED TO BE ONLINE YOU TWAT! If you JAVE TO JAVE streaming shit buy a half broken PS3 to use as a streaming box and save yourself a fortune.

"But I need the latest features and the best.... " BITCH LET ME PUT YOUR MOTHER OF OF HER MISERY. She lived with a basic ass TV for decades, and you learned to suck titties on her view of Maury. How dare you demand more than she suffered through with your teething ass! And should you NEED those features, enjoy never mating with girls younger than 40 and under 300 pounds.

Listen up bitches, here is how you buy a fucking TV. Does it hook into a basic ass wall jack? Yes? Done. That's it, that's all you need. Hook it up to local channels. You don't need shit other than that. If you think you do, just slap a damn dick cage on your cock and get it over with. You're already half-cucked, may as well go all the way. Let the real men bang the college queens, you can all have the 24/7 news channel leftovers.
 
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