Smart TV

A smart TV, also known as a connected TV (CTV or, rarely, CoTV[a]), is a traditional television set with integrated Internet and interactive Web 2.0 features that allow users to stream music and videos, browse the internet, and view photos. Smart TVs are a technological convergence of computers, televisions, and digital media players. Besides the traditional functions of television sets provided through traditional broadcasting media, these devices can provide access to over-the-top media services such as streaming television and internet radio, along with home networking access.[2][3][4]
Smart TV should not be confused with Internet TV,
In smart TVs, the
The technology that enables smart TVs is also incorporated into external devices such as
Definition
A smart TV device is either a television set with integrated Internet capabilities or a set-top box for television that offers more advanced computing ability and connectivity than a contemporary basic television set. A smart TVs is an
A smart TV platform has a public
Smart TVs deliver content (such as photos, movies and music) from other computers or network attached storage devices on a network using either a
History
In the early 1980s, "intelligent" television receivers were introduced in Japan. The addition of an
However, descriptions of the elements of a smart television can be found in public discourse from the beginning of the 1980s, if not earlier, with the introduction of videotex services, particularly teletext information for reception by television sets, leading commentators to consider that televisions and accessories would evolve to encompass a range of related activities. In the words of one commentator: "In the long run, this machine is likely to develop into a multi-purpose receiver, for electronic mail, dealing with the bank, calculations, remote information – and 'Not the nine o'clock news' or 'Casablanca' on video."[19]
In the early 2000s, "
The mass acceptance of digital television in the mid-late 2000s and early 2010s greatly improved smart TVs. Major TV manufacturers have announced production of smart TVs only for their middle-end to high-end TVs in 2015.[24][25][26] Smart TVs became the dominant form of television during the late 2010s. At the beginning of 2016, Nielsen reported that 29 percent of those with incomes over $75,000 a year had a smart TV.[27]
Typical features

Smart TV devices also provide access to
Platforms

Smart TV technology and software is still evolving, with both
Sales
According to a report from research group NPD In-Stat, in 2012 only about 12 million U.S. households had their Web-capable TVs connected to the Internet, although an estimated 25 million households owned a set with the built-in network capability. In-Stat predicted that by 2016, 100 million homes in North America and western Europe would be using television sets blending traditional programming with internet content.[41] By the end of 2019, the number of installed Connect TVs reached 1.26 billion worldwide.[42]
The number of households using
Use and issues
Social networking
Some smart TV platforms come prepackaged or can be optionally extended, with social networking technology capabilities. The addition of social networking synchronization to smart TV and HTPC platforms may provide an interaction both with on-screen content and with other viewers than is currently available to most televisions, while simultaneously providing a much more cinematic experience of the content than is currently available with most computers.[44]
Advertising
Some smart TV platforms also support
2019 research, "Watching You Watch: The Tracking Ecosystem of Over-the-Top TV Streaming Devices", conducted at
Security
There is evidence that a smart TV is vulnerable to attacks. Some serious security bugs have been discovered, and some successful attempts to run malicious code to get unauthorized access were documented on video. There is evidence that it is possible to gain root access to the device, install malicious software, access and modify configuration information for a remote control, remotely access and modify files on TV and attached USB drives, access camera and microphone.[53]
There have also been concerns that
Anticipating growing demand for an
Hackers have misused smart TV's abilities such as operating source codes for applications and its unsecured connection to the Internet. Passwords, IP address data, and credit card information can be accessed by hackers and even companies for advertisement. A company caught in the act is
Restriction of access
Internet websites can block smart TV access to content at will or tailor the content that will be received by each platform.
Reliability
In 2017, high-end Samsung smart TVs stopped working for at least seven days after a software update.[61] Application providers are rarely upgrading smart TV apps to the latest version; for example, Netflix does not support older TV versions with new Netflix upgrades.[62]
See also
- 10-foot user interface
- Automatic content recognition
- Digital Living Network Alliance(DLNA)
- Digital media player
- Home automation
- Home theater PC
- Hotel television systems
- Hybrid Broadcast Broadband TV
- Interactive television
- Internet of things
- List of mobile app distribution platforms
- List of smart TV platforms
- Over-the-top media service (OTT)
- PC-on-a-stick
- Second screen
- Smartphone
- Space shifting
- Smart speaker
- Telescreen
- Tivoization
- TV Genius
- Video on demand
Footnotes
- ^ "CoTV" is used primarily by Bell Media in Canada, to distinguish from its CTV Television Network and other CTV-branded services.[1]
References
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External links
Media related to Smart TV at Wikimedia Commons