There's hope for privacy yet
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Often it will yell at you every day and be very intrusive, not actually disconnect from the internet and force join any old WiFi connections/any non-password protected ones, or simply refuse to work unless you connect them (I think some people were saying newer Samsung TVs do that)
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It's exactly what I got: it has the telltale PCMCIA connector on the side and a store mode in the menu.
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Simple solution: buy a smart TV and never connect it to the internet.
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This won't work if you use actual, classic TV. But I researched for a fair while and found none of the dumb TVs are cheaper than low end smart TVs. Not by a long shot. So I got a giant computer screen instead. I just connect my switch or my laptop.
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Now I'm picturing the TV sounding like Marge Simpson's sisters.
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If they can make money off you, they will.
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Yes, or "commercial TV", which should include a TV tuner built-in. For the US, here are some examples of 4K commercial TVs for under $1,000:
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I got a Sharp Android smart tv last year when my 2006 Samsung died and it works great without internet access. Cheapest one there was.
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Just an FYI that the Smart cancer has already began infecting computer monitors. It won’t be long until there are no more dumb monitors.
Samsung and LG make smart computer monitors. There are probably many others.
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Hit up thrift stores they always have a pile in decent shape. Just test them at an outlet
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Many smart TVs still give you popups telling you to connect to the internet or they simply refuse work without connection. There's not a very good way to tell if any smart TV you get will do this ahead of time without looking over reviews, and even then many people just connect their TVs anyway so it might not show up there either.
I'd prefer to just have a display that works as a display from the start and not have to worry about it.
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are you sure the wife's tv doesn't try 8.8.8.8 or another public DNS server, or perhaps DoH after failing to resolve domains through the pihole?
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Must be a good store if you stay there half the year
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"subsidized" – TVs sold perfectly well before they were flooded with ads. Ads and selling user data just mean more money for CEOs. Always more, MORE, MOOORE PROFIT!
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There are tutorials on how to block secondary DNS servers when using Pihole. (The one I followed is in German but you can probably use your translator of choice.)
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Yeah. It's locked down at the firewall level.