It started, as these things often do, with a screenshot and a roar. Over the weekend in mid-December 2025, a Reddit post showing a bright new “Copilot” tile pinned to an LG TV home screen exploded across forums: users said the tile had appeared after a webOS update, whether they wanted it or not. The post and the flurry of follow-ups pushed the story into mainstream tech headlines almost instantly, and within 48 hours, LG owners around the world were trading the same complaint—an AI companion had arrived uninvited.
What users noticed first was how permanent the arrival felt. The Copilot tile behaves like a system component: you can hide the icon from the main menu, but there appears to be no way to fully uninstall the app from affected webOS sets. For many, that turned the issue from an oddity into a question of control—if an OEM can push a piece of code onto your living-room screen and never let you remove it, what does “owning” the device even mean anymore? Coverage of the episode framed the install as bloatware by design, and the reaction was immediate and visceral.
Beyond permanence, the Copilot that landed on webOS feels—at least for now—less like a polished, locally running helper and more like a web-forward shortcut to Microsoft’s cloud services. Reporters and some users who dug into the tile discovered that the initial rollout behaves much like a web app: it surfaces conversational search, content recommendations and quick answers, but doesn’t (yet) act like a deeply integrated, fully native experience. That technical detail doesn’t placate users; it only sharpens the argument that the software is being grafted on for visibility rather than because it materially improves the TV.
Privacy is the part of the story that keeps pulling the conversation outward from annoyance to alarm. Many users said the same update also enabled LG’s Live Plus feature by default—an Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) system that watches what’s on your screen and builds profiles for recommendations and targeted advertising. ACR isn’t new, but pairing an always-present AI tile with a telemetry pipeline that can identify shows and ads expands the stakes: recommendations are one thing, continuous content sniffing is another. Consumer watchdogs and privacy guides have long warned how ACR can widen a device’s telemetry surface; the established antidotes—turning off viewing data and ad personalization—exist, but they’re buried in menus most people never touch.
If you own an affected LG set and want to push back, there are practical steps that work today. You can hide the Copilot icon from the home screen through the TV’s Manage Apps or home customization options; it won’t free the storage, but it will remove the visual nag. To stop the ACR tracking that Live Plus performs, the path is Settings → All Settings → General → Additional Settings, then toggle off Live Plus (and while you’re there, look for ad-tracking or viewing-information options). For people who want to avoid system-level AI features entirely, the blunt workaround is to keep the TV offline and use an external streamer (Apple TV, NVIDIA Shield, a set-top box) for smart features—effectively turning the panel back into a dumb display and outsourcing intelligence to a device you control more tightly. Those community-sourced tips are the same ones users have been swapping on forums since the update hit.
Why is this happening now? The short version: manufacturers reshaped their product roadmaps for “AI TV” during 2025. LG has been public about embedding AI across its 2025 lineup—new webOS Hub builds and marketing around “AI TV” were visible throughout the year—so the Copilot arrival fits into a larger technical and commercial push to make screens conversational and recommendation-driven. At the same time, Microsoft and TV makers have been signing integration deals: Samsung announced and launched Copilot across its 2025 TV line, and Microsoft has been explicit about bringing Copilot to on-screen devices as part of a broader strategy to be the conversational layer for home screens. Those partnerships make the Copilot addition less of an isolated bug and more of a coordinated platform play—and that, in turn, explains why users are seeing similar moves from different manufacturers.
But coordination doesn’t equal consent. That’s the political and commercial nub here. Users feel steamrolled when an intimate device—the TV, in most homes, a shared centerpiece—acquires new functionality and telemetry without a transparent opt-in. Consumer advocates say manufacturers should make such installations optional and clearly explain what data is collected and why it’s useful. Regulators in some markets have been paying attention to dark patterns and preselected defaults; whether those rules can—or will—be applied to system apps on TVs is an open question. For now, the public airing of this update has become a reputational problem for LG, especially because it lands amid broader debates about privacy, attention economics and who benefits when screens learn more about us.
If you’re weighing what to do next: check the settings path above and disable Live Plus if you want less tracking; hide the Copilot tile if its presence irritates you; consider using a dedicated streamer if you prize granular control over features and updates. And if you’re more activist than pragmatic, make the complaint public—post to the company’s support channels and social media, and (perhaps most effectively) vote with your wallet when it’s time to upgrade. The technical detail of whether Copilot on your LG is a web shortcut or a future native feature may change with subsequent updates; the policy question—should manufacturers be allowed to install non-removable system apps that expand telemetry—won’t go away until companies or regulators address it.
This episode is a neat little parable about modern tech: convenience and novelty meet the old friction of ownership and choice. The “little freaky ghost” that showed up on living-room screens wasn’t malevolent, probably, but it was unwelcome—and that’s enough to start a hill of resistance. For now, the fixes are local and manual; for the long term, users and policymakers will have to decide what degree of remote control they’re willing to cede to manufacturers and cloud providers that think they know what you want before you do.
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