What is ACR and Why Should You Care?
Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) is surveillance technology embedded in virtually all modern smart TVs. It continuously monitors everything displayed on your screen—streaming apps, cable TV, gaming consoles, laptops connected via HDMI—by capturing audio fingerprints or taking screenshots every few seconds.
This data gets sent to company servers where it’s matched against massive content databases to identify exactly what you’re watching, when, and for how long. Your viewing profile is then sold to advertisers and data brokers.

The Scale of the Problem
- Vizio: Fined $2.2M by FTC for tracking 11 million TVs without consent
- Data collection: Some TVs capture 7,200 screen images per hour (2 per second)
- Enhanced profiling: Viewing data combined with demographics (age, income, location)
- Default enabled: ACR is pre-activated on most new TVs with confusing opt-out processes
How to Disable ACR by Brand
Samsung Smart TVs (Tizen OS)
- Home → Settings → All Settings
- Support → Terms & Privacy → Privacy Choices
- Uncheck: “Viewing Information Services”
- Optional: Disable “Interest-Based Advertising” and “Customization Service”
LG Smart TVs (webOS)
- Settings → All Settings → General
- System → Additional Settings → Live Plus (toggle OFF)
- Ads → Limit Ad Tracking (toggle ON)
- Home → Disable “Content Recommendation” and “Home Promotion”
Sony Smart TVs (Google TV/Android TV)
- Settings → Device Preferences → Usage & Diagnostics
- Turn OFF all tracking options
- Privacy → Ads → Opt out of Ads Personalization
Vizio Smart TVs (SmartCast)
- Menu → System → Reset & Admin
- Viewing Data (toggle OFF)
- Smart Interactivity (toggle OFF)
- Review additional privacy settings
Roku TVs (TCL, Hisense, etc.)
- Home → Settings → Privacy
- Smart TV Experience → Use info from TV inputs (UNCHECK)
- Advertising → Limit ad tracking (ENABLE)
- Microphone → Channel microphone access (DISABLE)
Fire TV (Amazon)
- Settings → Preferences → Privacy Settings
- Device Usage Data (toggle OFF)
- Collect App Usage Data (toggle OFF)
- Interest-based Ads (toggle OFF)
Network-Level Blocking (Recommended)
Even after disabling ACR, many TVs continue background tracking. Block these domains using Pi-hole, AdGuard Home, or router-level filtering:
We recommend network-level blocking solutions like Pi-hole (runs on Raspberry Pi), pfSense firewall software which can run on a Netgate hardware, or dedicated appliances like Firewalla, all of which support domain blacklisting.
Samsung
samsungacr.com
samsungcloudsolution.com
samsungcloudsolution.net
samsungads.com
samsungotn.net
samsungrm.net
LG
lgtvsdp.com
rdx2.lgtvsdp.com
lgsmartad.com
lgappstv.com
yumenetworks.com
smartclip.net
alphonso.tv
Vizio
api.vizio.com
analytics.vizio.com
control.tvinteractive.tv
control2.tvinteractive.tv
rlog.vizio.com
Roku
ravm.tv
logs.roku.com
Sony
ssm1.internet.sony.tv
ssm2.internet.sony.tv
bravia.dl.playstation.net
Universal Trackers
alphonso.tv
experian.com
neustar.biz
Advanced Privacy Measures
Router Configuration
- Set up a separate IoT network for smart devices
- Use OpenWrt or DD-WRT firmware for granular control
- Configure DNS filtering (Quad9, NextDNS, or Cloudflare for Families)
Alternative Solutions
- Dedicated streaming device: Use Apple TV, NVIDIA Shield, or computer instead of TV’s smart features
- Disconnect from internet: Use TV as display-only, connect external devices
- VLAN isolation: Segment smart TV traffic from main network
Quick Verification Steps
After making changes:
- Test: Navigate through TV menus to ensure functionality isn’t broken
- Monitor: Check router logs for blocked connection attempts
- Update: Regularly review privacy settings after TV software updates
Red Flags to Watch For
- Forced acceptance: New terms requiring data sharing consent
- Reset settings: Updates that re-enable tracking features
- New “features”: Voice assistants or recommendation engines
- Performance issues: Sluggish interface when blocking domains (may need whitelist adjustments)
Why This Matters
Your viewing habits reveal intimate details about your life including political views, health concerns, financial status, relationships, and daily routines. This data can be used for:
- Targeted manipulation through personalized political ads
- Insurance discrimination based on health-related viewing
- Financial profiling affecting loan and credit decisions
- Law enforcement requests without warrants
Conclusion
Smart TV privacy isn’t just about stopping ads, it’s about preventing corporate surveillance in your home. These steps require 10 minutes of setup but provide lasting protection for your family’s digital privacy.
Remember: Manufacturers profit from your data, so they make privacy settings deliberately hard to find. Stay vigilant and help others protect their privacy too.