It was 2G iirc, enough for book download. Uploading a perceptive hash of what you are watching - e.g. a frame every few seconds - also fits on 2G speeds.
TV phones home a lot, with info about stuff, some info big lots of bandwidth.
could there be an attack with buying some tvs and putting them on public WiFi - and could one find a way to increase the amount the tv was sending so it amounted to an attack - but still have plausible deniability.
If tvs were put on public wifi, which I guess there is no reason why you shouldn't put your tv on public wifi, and the tv is using lots of bandwidth, and your tv is popular in a country with lots of free wifi, is that tv manufacturer guilty of an attack on the free wifi infrastructure of that country?
I'm asking for a short story or several I might write some day.
Ford, iirc, places it on the floor under or behind some seats making it much easier to deal with.
I think MA just passed a law about not allowing vehicles sold there to sell your telemetry data or something.
https://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Sidewalk/b?ie=UTF8&node=213281...
In terms of what, lines of code? Engineer days?