Amazon has
55" Hisense E7 Cinema Series 4K UHD Hi-QLED Mini-LED 144Hz Smart Fire TV (2026, 55E7SF) on sale for
$427.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
DanValentino for sharing this deal.
Note: "Delivery to your room of choice" and "Delivery and unpacking" are available as a free option. Stock may be limited.
Specs: - Resolution: 4K UHD (3840 x 2160)
- Display technology: Hi-QLED (Quantum Dot) with Mini-LED backlighting
- Refresh rate: Native 144Hz
- HDR support: Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ Adaptive, HDR10, HLG
- Operating system: Fire OS
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi 5, Bluetooth 5.4, AirPlay screen mirroring
- Audio: 20W total output (2 channels), Dolby Atmos
- Power consumption: 180W
- Dimensions with stand: 48.3" W × 28.1" H × 2.6" D
- Weight: 27.6 lbs
- VESA mount: 200 × 300 mm
- Ports:
- 4x HDMI
- 2x USB (1x USB 2.0, 1x USB 3.0)
- 1x Ethernet
- 1x Optical audio out
- RF antenna input
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank TomKansasCity68
The data potentially include:
What you watch — programs, movies, channels and other recognized content, including external HDMI sources.
Viewing behavior — used to build audience segments and infer viewing interests/habits.
Public IP address and therefore approximate geographic/household association.
A device/Smart-TV identifier used to associate activity with the television.
Device and usage information, including interactions with smart-TV services.
Depending on what services/accounts you use, identifiers and account-related information can also be collected under broader Hisense privacy policies.
The particularly interesting part is cross-device advertising. Hisense's current Android TV policy says viewing data can be provided to advertising partner Nexxen, which can use the household IP address to associate other devices sharing that IP address with the household. That enables advertising to be selected, delivered, and measured based partly on TV viewing habits—not necessarily just on the television itself. These data are not sold only to advertisers. They are sold to anyone who wants to write a check--that could be a government, a political party, law enforcement, your ex-spouse's attorney, bill collectors, you name it.
Other sources indicate they also collect multiple screen captures per second of what you are watching and ship those off as well as snapshots (if the model has cameras built in) of the room (the viewers) the TV is in and ship those off.
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