Replacing a dishwasher. Most of the mid-range options now come with fucking Wi-Fi. Found a model I liked, no info in manual and support from Samsung was of course, useless since it wasn’t already in the manual and wanted to keep talking about their exciting “smart things” app. gag.

I saw a youtube video of a guy disconnecting wifi cable on a fridge. I’m fine doing that if I have to open up the board but it’ll probably be smaller than the fridge and who knows if it’ll be helpfully labled like the one in the video was. Internet searching showed me there may be oven keypress combinations to turn wi-fi radio on/off. Anyone have anything similar/advice for Samsung appliances, specifically dishwashers?

    • @logos@sh.itjust.works
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      95 days ago

      Honestly asking; Why would I care if my dishwasher connected to some random Wi-Fi. What does it know about me? Someone gonna hack it?

      • Dem Bosain
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        435 days ago

        There have been instances of network-enabled devices updating to put existing features behind a paywall, unilaterally changing the terms of service (can’t use device anymore until you agree to new terms), and simply removing features that you paid for when you bought the device.

        Why does a dishwasher need wifi?

        • @pearsaltchocolatebar
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          165 days ago

          So you can get an alert when the dishes are done.

          Not justifying the feature itself, but there is a purpose.

        • @sun_is_ra@sh.itjust.works
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          5 days ago

          How is that legal? Could u buy a dishwasher then 3 months later it starts asking for a small fee per wash?

          I know these things happen but usually you are informed in advance and bought the product at a big discount

          • Dem Bosain
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            54 days ago

            It probably requires an app to monitor the wash cycle. All they have to do is start charging a subscription to use the app. If people bought the dishwasher because they would get alerts when their dishes were clean, now they have to pay a recurring fee.

            Roku pushed an update to their TVs requiring owners to agree to a new terms of service. There was no “disagree” button, and the TV wouldn’t work until people accepted the changes.

            This is such a new problem that it’s never been challenged in court.

          • ddh
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            64 days ago

            It will be buried somewhere in the terms & conditions.

      • @pdxfed@lemmy.worldOP
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        115 days ago

        If you’re asking in earnest, the last decade has shown for profit corps know no bounds in using technology to extract, poorly protect, and often aggregate and then will make any attempt to monetize possible–often retroactively. While a dishwasher might not have much data in itself to exploit, if your internet connected TV, Car or phone which is constantly scanning for nearby WI-FI items or networks decided to start cataloguing them…well then that would just be a Tuesday for Google, Ford or Sony right?

        The more data points, the worse. More breaches, more creepy facts about us floating around in some creepy company or regime’s stockpile of data to be used, unilaterally against me. Or maybe the next company to buy the current company I’m happy with. Or the next regime that decides people like me aren’t full humans. Between your computer and phone, most people’s lives are somewhat laid bare, but add in car tracking which auto companies have stuck their funnel into during the last 5 years, add in appliances, put Wi-Fi if your shower handle…again the people adding Wi-Fi to things like a dishwasher that don’t need it have only one thing to gain, monetizing your data and selling it to someone who wants to control you in some way.

        • @TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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          -265 days ago

          Then require one. You’re acting like this is an unavoidable thing. You just simply don’t connect the appliance to the Internet.

          It’s not difficult.

            • @EngineerGaming@feddit.nl
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              -35 days ago

              At least in some places, having open wi-fi without KYC is illegal, so the neighbors aren’t going to do this - passwordless is not the default.

              • ddh
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                84 days ago

                I can’t make my neighbours obey the law either

              • AmbiguousProps
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                105 days ago

                It as a protocol does not and has never required a password. Nor have routers ever required it.

                  • AmbiguousProps
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                    5 days ago

                    "Am I wrong?

                    No, it is everyone else who is wrong."

                    You’re the meme. No router has ever required it. Yes, it’s an option. But how do you think open networks exist? Do you think that magically the router will know it’s in a residence and suddenly require a password?

                    How do you explain the 30 million+ open networks on Wigle? https://wigle.net/stats

                  • Chozo
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                    55 days ago

                    From my bedroom, right this moment, there are four unsecured networks I can connect to, which I do not own or control.

                    This is not an uncommon scenario.

          • @Taleya@aussie.zone
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            44 days ago

            Ok dude.

            Have you ever set up one of these devices? It’s not a case of ‘find my wifi, enter in passkey, connected’ they literally broadcast an unsecured ad hoc network that you connect to and configure from.

            If you never connect it it will sit there blaring an unsecured wifi with access to its core configuration forever