I will never buy another Hisense, JVC or any television that uses roku. I agreed to whatever was on there when I bought them - now they make both my televisions trash if i don't click agree. I am sure we'll see some legal action on this eventually.
I was able to use my Ultra just fine after pressing Home several times to clear the message. Yes, the message will return, but it has NOT blocked using the Roku. I watched something for an hour on Disney+ without a problem.
I think this was a poor way for Roku to push this out to the users. But as others have already stated, the agreement Roku is presenting does not really differ from what any other provider has. I believe Roku should have presented this via email, not directly on the screen of the device. My guess is some law-yer determined this was the best way, which we can all agree is not the case.
I am in tears right now work 50 hours a week. Only day to unwind and now I can’t even watch television. I disagree. I am reaching out to FCC and Walmart just wrong.
The "agree" button was accidentally pressed, and i want to opt out. Did I pretty much miss my chance?
I previously read that hitting the home button would escape it. So, I mashed that button a bunch of times first...with no apparent result.
Then, I RAPIDLY and repeatedly hit the back button. I'm not certain of the exact count at which it finally responded. I noticed it at around around 10 times. At that point, it seemed confused. It asked me if I wanted to report some sort of random bug/issue. This is when I was able to escape by declining to report the issue.
Not sure if it matters, mine is a TCL TV with the built-in Roku.
I have a second TCL TV that hasn't received the "ransom" demand yet. If/when it does, I'll try reproducing the behavior in a more controlled fashion. If I'm successful, I'll respond with more details.
Yes, it's real BS! I called my 2 roku tv manufacturers this morning and let them know I will never buy another roku television from them. The only agreement i ever agreed to was when i bought them, and now the tv's i bought are useless if i don't accept.
It is really about coercion- when i called roku support, he said I must click agree or it will no longer work. After 30 minutes arguing and asking for his supervisor, he told me to unplug everything from the tv, wait 10 seconds, plug everything back in and power up. Now it works as it should. This tech guy knew this all along, but the roku company told them to string their customers along until the end.
Some way to treat your customers!
It is really about coercion- when i called roku support, he said I must click agree or it will no longer work. After 30 minutes arguing and asking for his supervisor, he told me to unplug everything from the tv, wait 10 seconds, plug everything back in and power up. Now it works as it should. This tech guy knew this all along, but the roku company told them to string their customers along until the end.
Some way to treat your customers!
> The "agree" button was accidentally pressed, and i want to opt out. Did I pretty much miss my chance?
No, but you have to act quickly by snail-mail, within 30 days, If you wade through the following contract to nearly the end:
https://docs.roku.com/published/disputeresolution/en/us
You'll find this clause. You need to follow the directions and mail them the exact "ransom" they demand 😀
L. 30-Day Right to Opt Out. You have the right to opt out of arbitration by sending written notice of your decision to opt out to the following address by mail: General Counsel, Roku Inc., 1701 Junction Court, Suite 100, San Jose, CA 95112 within 30 days of you first becoming subject to these Dispute Resolution Terms. Such notice must include the name of each person opting out and contact information for each such person, the specific product models, software, or services used that are at issue, the email address that you used to set up your Roku account (if you have one), and, if applicable, a copy of your purchase receipt. For clarity, opt-out notices submitted via any method other than mail (including email) will not be effective. If you send timely written notice containing the required information in accordance with this Section 1(L), then neither party will be required to arbitrate the Claims between them.
This move hasn't done their stock price any favors. It's lost over 27% of it's value since February 15th. And that's pretty much just them. The market sector they're in is slightly up at .4%. The S&P 500 is up 3.85%. All of this comes from Yahoo Financial News. Not giving any financial advice here, just noticing. Roku is threatening to "brick" your Roku device. It looks like Roku may be "bricking" their company.
Before that message popped up on my screen today, I still had a positive image of Roku. Not so much anymore. And after reading some of those terms in their updated agreement, even less. I don't think people like what they're doing with this forced agreement. Nobody likes to be forced to do anything. I agreed to it, as I'm sure most people will, but it's really a bad way they went about it.
We also have an Amazon Fire stick that has been a lot more reliable lately on apps like Paramount+ and YouTube. We were just about to upgrade our 3 Roku devices with new ones, but now I have to think about it. Maybe we'll upgrade with Amazon FIre sticks instead. They include Alexa.
I don't know what has happened to that fun company we called Roku that brought us so many cool things via streaming. I guess that company is gone.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/roku-roku-stock-slides-market-224517851.html