I know Smart TV privacy concerns are a big conversation here, largely because there’s practically no good way to jailbreak a Smart TV, but I wanted to ask about a specific use case.

How much better is it to disable all network connectivity on a smart tv (running Roku as its core OS) and hook an Apple TV box up to it?

More or less, I suppose what I’m asking is whether or not using an Apple TV is as private as it can get with easy-to-use streaming devices?

  • shaserlark@sh.itjust.works
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    16 hours ago

    AppleTV is smooth but as others pointed out you shouldn’t trust their claims that they’re private. They’re probably more private than e.g. Google out of the box, but not an actual privacy company.

    Side note: in case you’re an Apple user and you weren’t aware of this, you can make it a bit better by obtaining your private key so that you have actual E2EE and you can add hardware keys for 2FA which makes it more secure. Of course this should be the bare minimum but it’s nice that they support these things out of the box.

    Regarding metadata: https://support.apple.com/en-us/102651#%3A~%3Atext=This+metadata+is+always+encrypted%2CAdvanced+Data+Protection+is+enabled.

    Maybe it’s worth checking if you’re okay with what kind of metadata they’re processing.

  • bad_news@lemmy.billiam.net
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    21 hours ago

    An Android TV situation that you degoogle (you can remove a bunch of the Google tracking and ads via Android’s debug interface) would probably be better than either, and Android has EVERY app you can dream of. I’d suggest a linux box, but I assume you want a remote and I’ve never been able to swing a good remote situation on linux.

  • adarza@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    of the two, common sense media says apple is better from a privacy standpoint.

    and, if i had a roku-powered tv, i’d skip the internet on it (never hook it up) and use an external device, even if it was just a roku stick.

      • dkc@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        I used to have a Shield. I donated it to GoodWill when Nvidia updated their UI to start showing ads on the Home Screen. I switched to Apple TV and not only does it not force me to watch ads, it’s actually just been a better overall. I haven’t had a single issue streaming anything from Plex to my Apple TV, where sometimes the Shield would struggle with high fidelity audio tracks.

        • Otter@lemmy.ca
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          20 hours ago

          I believe there is a way to swap the homescreen with a FOSS one, but I agree that people shouldn’t have to do that in the first place

      • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        The shield is a million times better since you can get around ads and other privacy violations.

        Good luck trying that with any Apple mobile or TV device.

        • brrt@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          You can install DNS content blockers (like NextDNS) on Apple TV which will take care of a good chunk of ads and privacy violations. This also works if you install a VPN App that has those options.

          Not sure what you would install on a shield that would be much more effective. Maybe you could explain.

          • ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
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            22 hours ago

            It’s difficult to get anything to work on android tv when you don’t sign and don’t enable all the google shit. Even then the privacy statement is still bend over or your tv doesn’t boot past this screen.

            The Apple TV much better.

            It may be better than current android tv because the shield is so old and not been updated in so long.

            Apple TV doesn’t have ads only what’s on when you have the app icon selected. Except inside apps that have ads.

    • Viri4thus@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Sadly that evaluation trusts what Apple says, not what Apple does.

      With the stagnation of iPhone growth, Apple has turned to services and there’s nothing more profitable than selling access to people.

  • Majestic
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    1 day ago

    Yes. An Apple TV will be about as private as you can get for something that supports mainstream streaming apps (running a mini-pc won’t allow better than 720p quality and you’ll struggle to get remotes to work, it’ll be a clunky experience via web browsers often). It will be a lot better than a smart TV, especially a Roku who are among the worst.

    If you want a bit more privacy consider running a pihole and redirecting DNS traffic at your firewall to your pihole or blocking all DNS traffic not from your pihole. I run a firewall solution that includes DNS redirection and blocking and there are a lot of measurement endpoints for streaming apps that you can block without the app breaking so that’s another little ounce. This doesn’t require a ton more effort though it is more effort it can be a set and forget type of thing. Importantly this does not block in-app ads.

    For me the fact they don’t have any ads is what sells me on it. I don’t want ads on my homescreen. I don’t even want them in the apps but getting that peace and lack of clutter on the homescreen is so nice.

    Apple TVs are also just so smooth. Smart TV’s feel sluggish and pathetic compared to how well everything just works on a device that’s properly powered for the task and not constantly sucking up all your data.

    Apple TVs also have a lot of Apple privacy settings though obviously some of them apps may not allow like many streaming apps require a location check at least intermittently for licensing reasons to prove you’re still in the country but you can limit it as much as possible.

    If you have a decent wifi network and you know you’re not going to be streaming say homemade BluRay rips the wifi entry model is excellent (currently it supports wifi 6 and has a really good wifi chip). I personally run Plex and a media server so I choose the wifi+ethernet model to have the reliability of ethernet and don’t regret it but it’s understandable if your situation precludes being able to use a wired connection or you want to save the $20 extra they charge.

    • undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch
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      4 hours ago

      I dump Blu-rays either directly to BDMV or MKV (TV shows) on a wired NAS; streaming to Apple TV via Infuse is super smooth.

    • Majestic
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      1 day ago

      Putting this here as another comment so as to not get too lengthy in my original reply:

      The only other things I can recommend in the streaming space would be Dune-HD’s products which are more expensive than Apple TV (though not more than Nvidia shield pro) and are not quite as simple and easy to use but do offer customization and a nice virtualized linux+androidtv system on some of their models AND maybe the Nvidia Shield Pro with caveats. But I have a bit of a bone to pick with the Shield for a number of reasons:

      1. Price. They haven’t updated the hardware in 5 years and have changed it from a premium product without ads to standard AndroidTV with ads on the homescreen yet charge the same $200 price, meanwhile Apple dropped the price on their AppleTV and is eating their lunch with annual hardware updates and regular software updates that bring new functionality
      2. Features. The shield still has bugs around things like framerate switching while AppleTV does not nor does Dune-HD’s products
      3. The lack of updates, the move from a premium android experience without homescreen ads to one with ads. I feel it could be killed off any moment, they’re just lazily milking the product which is probably the only reason they haven’t. You /can/ with some effort alter the launcher to a 3rd party launcher to lose the ads but it’s not easy, it usually requires revisiting and you can do the same thing with the Dune-HD products and they care a lot more and offer a lot more IMO.

      The only reason you might really prefer Dune-HD over an Apple TV is the ability to side-load a modded youtube app if you use that a ton but even that feels up in the air with how hard Google is going in their war on anyone using things like that and how successful they’ve been against it. You can’t block ads in ad-supported major streaming services (Netflix, Max, Hulu, Disney+, etc), neither with pihole nor any other way I’m aware of.

  • Peffse@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I’m sorry I can’t speak for Apple TV, but I do know Roku. I captured about a month of DNS with a Roku device on the network. It phones home about everything. Even better, they hardcoded the DNS server on the device to prevent tampering with ads in their menus. I had to set up a redirect to quarantine it before eventually taking it off the network completely.

    Last I recall, the most private method for general streaming was a cheap Android device from Walmart with a custom OS installed on it.

    • Majestic
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      1 day ago

      Beware I have heard that the latest revision of the Onn 4k box locks down the bootloader and prevents people from doing this as they found out and obviously wanted that data. Specifically I believe only models from before 2024 (should be model number that indicates this) still work with this.

    • adarza@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      cheap Android device from Walmart with a custom OS

      they had a pile of these on closeout last time i wandered through electronics, ima have to make a trip tomorrow to see exactly what they are. from venturing over to the xda forums, it would appear that i’m looking for the 2021 or 2023 models? i don’t have pocket internet, so i’ve got to jot down a few notes of what to look for.

  • sic_semper_tyrannis@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    Apple is closed source and has proven to be anti-consuner and has sold personal data. They cannot be trusted. Use Kodi on a RPi or a laptop.

    • Brujones@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I have to ask… Are you actually happy with Kodi? Did you find a way to make it more usable?

      I set it up on a RPi, got Netflix and Amazon working on it, and I really, REALLY wanted to like it…

      But I just can’t. The interface is awful. The sorting is nonsensical. You have to manually enable thumbnails. You can change it, but you have to change it for every interface. And then it doesn’t remember, so you have to go through all that again the next time you use it.

      Sorry if I sound whiny, but I’d love to know if you got it to be more usable than I could.

      • sic_semper_tyrannis@lemmy.today
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        1 day ago

        It took me some time to understand how to modify the UI but once I figured it out I now have it setup really nicely. It’s very intuitive now and my wife has no problem interacting with the UI.

        I could never get Netflix working (not really a big deal) and I can’t get YouTube or Invidious working which is quite annoying.

        Ultimately to answer your question I really enjoy Kodi. I could send you some screenshots later and help you out if you want.

    • flatbield@beehaw.org
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      23 hours ago

      Yes. More people need to realize that Apple is less transparent but not necessiarily that user oriented in areas such as privacy and security.

  • Gayhitler
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    20 hours ago

    That will* work.

    *actually figure out what you’re trying to maintain privacy from and set up your icloud account appropriately.

  • buwho
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    1 day ago

    Best bet would be to use an old laptop/mini pc or something similar and run a linux distro running a vpn or something. Check out what this person did:

    https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/07/broken-linux-laptop-makes-for-a-fine-smart-tv-alternative/

    As much as i hate Apple closed source ecosystem, they do alot to protect user privacy (as far as we know) and put in effort to allow users to have the options to turn app tracking off etc. so an Apple TV unit on a dumb TV might be another option…But, when it becomes obsolete in a few years and the apps dont work…hand over more cash…

    • flatbield@beehaw.org
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      23 hours ago

      Frankly, just build a new full up Linux workstation in a media center case. You want to be able to run a browser and a media center app, and use it as your home server for things like nextcloud, etc. Been doing it this way for 20 years.

      Edit: For remote control a wireless key board is great. KDE Connect works well now too.

    • adarza@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      at least you’re just replacing the ‘box’ and not the whole tv. which is one of the main benefits of not using the ‘smart’ inside the tv, and using an external device instead. cheaper to upgrade the ‘smart’ part.

      i mostly use old cheap laptops with ulv soc (about 6 watts with lid down, screen off). has worked for me, so far. have a compact wireless keyboard with integrated trackpad (the older logi one) for a ‘remote’. on the tv i also have a full-fledged desktop attached to one input… why do client-server when i can hook the ‘server’ right up?

    • Undertaker@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      they do alot to protect user privacy (as far as we know)

      They do nearly nothing to so. Kuketz has analyzed what’s happening when turning some settings that are bad for privacy off. The result: Apple still phones home with respect to the disabled services.

      So please stop throwing wrong information

  • ToadOfHypnosis
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    1 day ago

    This is what I do. You have to be in one eco system at some level these days and Apple painted themselves into a corner with their privacy marketing. Rather only give info to one. Nothing a smart TV does can’t be done on my Apple TV plus Apple TV adds a lot of features if you are an Apple user on other devices.

    • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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      1 day ago

      Apple painted themselves into a corner with their privacy marketing

      That’s the cool thing about marketing, you can lie to the plebs and then do crime to fuck them over, daddy Sam ain’t gonna do shit anyway.

      • ToadOfHypnosis
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        24 hours ago

        I guess it’s a matter of degrees like everything. If they have to give the appearance of privacy, they will concede towards privacy more than say Google who just fucks privacy on the bus in front of you. Unless you go 100% open Linux on every single device, which is hard for most people, you will have some compromises to make. I am still teaching myself Linux.