CAFE by GE for those who are wondering.

We are renovating our house including all new appliances. I have told my partner to make sure we get non smart appliances. This is why.

Yes I can setup a VLAN for it to be on but that’s not the point.

  • @MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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    5 months ago

    Why the fuck can’t we make things hot without the internet? FFS

    Fire: “I got you, bro.”

  • Hadouken Shoryuken
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    15 months ago

    I wonder if they will eventually make a toilet bowl to connect to the Internet. Can’t flush until you connects to the Internet just because…

      • @Dalvoron@lemm.ee
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        15 months ago

        AI will analyse video of dirty bums and generate the exact pressure and aim required to get them clean.

    • @InevitableList@beehaw.org
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      15 months ago

      There are toilets that analyse your waste and send the results to your doctor. They ID you by scanning your anus since everyone’s anus is unique. Maybe one day the results can be sent to your kitchen and your fridge and airfryer can deny you access to unhealthy foods when your toilet tells them to.

  • Karyoplasma
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    15 months ago

    They are smart because they know how to spy on you without telling you.

    • @neomachino@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      25 months ago

      I can totally see a point in some of the features.

      The other day my wife and I got 20 minutes from home before I said “oh shit I don’t know if I turned the oven off”. Turns out I did, but we had to drive home to check. I would have loved to pull up an app that told me it was actually off, or even if I was on be able to turn it off from there.

      With that said, it’s not worth all the extra bullshit in my opinion.

    • @Catsrules@lemmy.ml
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      15 months ago

      I actually find it very nice to get notifications about my toaster oven being preheated or done cooking, or being able to see how much time is left or remotely stop it.

  • TimeSquirrel
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    25 months ago

    You didn’t buy an oven. You bought a node for someone else’s botnet.

    • @jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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      25 months ago

      Hanlon’s razor, but its interesting to imagine that some Russian, US, Israeli, Chinese, etc agents infiltrated management at appliance manufacturers and convinced them to make all their devices smart, just so they could build bigger botnets

    • @RobotZap10000@feddit.nl
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      35 months ago

      Whenever someone designs or purchases a smart device, this is what they need to be told. Is it really worth the risk for potential harm?

  • Captain Beyond
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    5 months ago

    But they told me I can just not connect it to the internet and it’ll be just like any dumb device.

    Eventually these things will come with modems built in so you can’t even do that.

    • WilfordGrimley
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      35 months ago

      My APAP machine has a sim card and unless I am careful to not disable airplane mode every time I start it up, it will send all of my health data to company that I have signed no agreement with.

      I explicitly declined to agree to the privacy policy of the company that sold it to me.

      If I find my data in a breach, lawyers will be involved.

      • @tempest@lemmy.ca
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        25 months ago

        Hopefully you don’t live in the US where your insurance company can buy that data and use it to deny you coverage or raise your rates.

        They already do it with cars why not CPAP machines.

  • Admiral Patrick
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    15 months ago

    That’s a big, honking “no” from me.

    It’d be one thing if the “smart” features were there but only supplemented the basic functionality. It’s another entirely for those basic features to require an internet connection.

    Out of curiosity, did the product description indicate the internet connection was required? I’m soon to be replacing some appliances and want to know what to look out for (besides all mentions of “wifi” or “smart”).

    • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      05 months ago

      did the product description indicate the internet connection was required?

      That’s an important question.

      That said, we were recently appliance shopping and none of them said that it was required, but a couple of the negative reviews mentioned it.

      We ended up choosing one of the very few that didn’t list wifi or an app as a feature. Hopefully there isn’t a stealth modem hidden in there somewhere. I guess we’ll find out next week when it’s delivered…

      • Admiral Patrick
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        25 months ago

        Thanks for the additional insight.

        A coffee maker, I’d just return. But a dishwasher, refrigerator, oven, etc would be a huge hassle I’d want to avoid. I think my best bet, like you said, is to just look for one that has absolutely no mention of w-fi or “smart”.

  • rem26_art
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    15 months ago

    they’re using the Wi-fi radiation to cook your meals /s

    Thats really, really dumb. I can understand maybe wanting the option of having your oven ping your phone when the timer goes off, but what could it possibly need internet access for in order to turn on the heating element and a fan for a set period of time??

    • @tiramichu@lemm.ee
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      15 months ago

      It doesn’t need it. That’s exactly the point.

      Even though air frying doesn’t need Internet, the manufacturer is restricting that feature as a way to force you to set up the WiFi, so they can then slurp up all your data.

      They’re literally holding the feature hostage, as motivation.

      • @gazter@aussie.zone
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        05 months ago

        Is data on when I turn the oven on, and how long I run it for, even worthwhile? Or do you think it’s sniffing out other info from my network?

        • @CafecitoHippo@lemm.ee
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          05 months ago

          Is data on when I turn the oven on, and how long I run it for, even worthwhile?

          They wouldn’t be holding you hostage for it if it wasn’t.

          • @Don_alForno@feddit.org
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            15 months ago

            Nah. Corporations aren’t all knowing godlike beings. They are run by stupid people who make mistakes, just like us.

        • @Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          15 months ago

          I’ve honestly come to the conclusion that some companies have management that actually believes its worth while to collect the most meaningless telemetry data, even after the ridiculous cost of bandwidth, database storage, hosting, etc. which all become more bonkers the larger the dataset. I’ve seen the cloud bills for actual useful data, I don’t want think about how much they must be paying AWS/Azure/GCP to host such worthless data. There’s no way its at all profitable to do so

  • @rekabis@lemmy.ca
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    05 months ago

    My microwave is a 1977 Amanda Radarange. It can boil a cup of water in ⅕ of the time a modern microwave can.

    Now granted, it has zero fancy settings and a simple number pad that does nothing but set how long you want the microwave to run.

    But honestly, this simplicity is a large part of it’s charm. No connectivity needs, no features locked behind paywalls, no extraneous bullshit or never-used features. Just a tool that does only one thing, and does it exceptionally well.

    • @JovialMicrobial@lemm.ee
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      05 months ago

      I got a “retrowave” in mint green. It’s dumb, uses a turn dial to set the cook time, stands on little feet like it’s from Rocko’s Modern Life, and looks like it’s from the 50’s. Have a matching toaster and eventually want a matching fridge.

      It’s been 4 years and no issues which is more than I can say about a lot of other new appliances we’ve gotten for the house.

      For dumb appliances with a fun aesthetics look up 'retro (name of appliance here) and you’ll get all the brands who make stuff like that. It’s the only way I’ve been able to avoid smart garbage so far.

      • @rekabis@lemmy.ca
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        05 months ago

        The fridge will likely operate far less efficiently than a modern fridge unless you have it rebuilt.

        With that said, a rebuilt fridge - with a more efficient cooling system and better insulation and all seals redone, etc. - does not cost significantly more than a new midrange fridge.

        • @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          05 months ago

          Really!? That’s a bit of a life hack. Good to know.

          Usually mass-produced is a fraction of the price of anything bespoke.

          • @rekabis@lemmy.ca
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            05 months ago

            Well, most of the fridge is already there. You just need to disassemble, sandblast the metal and paint (if the paint is in poor condition), replace the insulation with closed-cell spray foam, replace the refrigeration system with a modern Freon-free system, reassemble and put new seals on.

            An old fridge can be quite simple, structurally speaking. It’s in the 70s and 80s when fridges started getting compact, difficult to repair, and disposable.