North Carolina Fights Back Against Lexmark
ngrier writes "Seems that at least some aren't sitting idly by, while printer manufacturers try to assert total control. The North Carolina legislature just approved a measure which guarantees the consumer's right to refill ink cartridges. For history of the Lexmark DMCA-related story, involving the company placing copyright-protected code in their printer cartridges in order to prevent competitors from producing compatible cartridges, there are previous Slashdot posts about it here(1), here(2), and here(3)."
I think if Ford Motor Company tried to completely control the aftermarket by trying to control the tire you put on your car by some device, I think this Legislature would act.
There are many areas of the market place that this should be applied.
The price of printers may go up, but we will still have Choice when it comes to ink. Ink is by far the higher cost in the long run.
Are you an employee of a company that manufacturers inkjet printers? Are you an inkjet owner? Have you been thinking of buying an inkjet printer? If so, listen up.
Now, don't get me wrong. Everyone owning their own printing press is an important leap for free speech, and thus democracy,
but there's one tidbit the printer manufacturers have neglected...
The loss leader model in the printing technology business is a failure.
Sure money is pouring in now, but sooner or later your customers will reel from the pain caused by you ramming their asses.
Let's face it-- previous inkjet owners would rather print at Kinkos than buy a new inkjet printer. If you put yourself in your customers' shoes, it's not hard to see why:
1. Ink cartridges are too expensive. Boy, are they too expensive!
2. The cartridges have a short shelf life before they dry up and jam the print heads.
3. Printing regularly (or otherwise wasting ink) is the only way to combat the ink drying problem.
4. Consumers are reluctant to print anything unless absolutely necessary thanks to the artificially high price of ink.
Thus, inkjet printers are rarely excercised enough to maintain them and rarely work right when they are needed.
Ink cartridges have a short shelf life and no printer manufacturer has been able to solve that problem. Because of that, Gillette's give-away-the-razor-sell-the-blades-at-a-primium model does not adapt well to the printing consumables industry. In
the meantime, raping consumers on ink is a business model that will soon die, because consumers will find that inkjet printers are just not worth it. Joe Sixpack will learn soon enough that the printer bundled "free" with his PC is nothing but a money pit.
Because printers are sold cheaply (presumably at a loss), it's not surprising that printer reliability has gone down the shitter. Manufacturers are cutting corners when producing printers. Inkjet printers today are made out of cheap plastic where metal should be used, resulting in a fragile product likely to jam paper.
Let's face it, until printer manufacturers change their business model, inkjet printers are just not worth the hassle.
Well consumers have that right already - they are perfectly free to refill their cartridges; of course, it doesn't do them any good, because the chip ignores the new ink. Is this a ban on putting the chips in?
I doubt it, although Lexmark would be a fool to push it.
"Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
Is there a lot of this in the USA? States which have allowed things that are banned in other states gaining additional 'export' markets? I can think of people travelling to Vegas for one.
I'm glad someone's deciding to finally act on this. Ink cartridges should not be costing 20,30,40 dollars. It's ink... the technology has been around for several hundred years. Now granted, printer technology has only been around 20 years, but still, it's not like it's rocket science (or rocket fuel, for that matter :)
hookers and grits.
Oh please....consumer choice doesn't have anything to do with this. A North Carolina company may get shut down, costing 1,200 jobs, which is why there is soon going to be a law protecting it.
I half expect Kentucky's government to jump in and ban the sale of replacement ink cartridges to protect Kentucky jobs or some other nonsense.
More on topic, if this bill get's signed it'll be interesting to see if similar legislation is passed in other states.
I always buy my printers based on how much it'll run me to replace the ink afterwards. Not necessarily comparing *just* that, granted, but it's a big factor. These days, my favored brand is generally Epson, and my still-relatively-new Stylus C62 has been good to me. And replacement ink doesn't break the bank.
If people would *think* before they purchase and realize that Lexmark may have decent printer prices but their ink is absolutely ridiculous, such legislation would be largley unnecessary.
Why not fix the whole DMCA? Or at least codify something stating that DMCA doesn't cover cases where the intent was clearly only anticompetitive?
The big money is in toner not inkjet ink. Toner cartridges are the cartridges that Lexmark put anti-refill technology on. Things like counting the amount of times the drum roles restricting the cartridge to so many pages printed (even if there's still toner left in the cartridge!) there are companies out there that can circumvent this. check out Multilaser
IANAL. But, I tend to doubt that local law can overide Federal Copyright Law.
Fight Spammers!
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The DMCA is federal. No matter how much we wish otherwise, we need to make the change at a federal level.
Even though California or Oregon voters may be in favor of medical marijuana, the federal prohibition on marijuana trumps that.
Repeal DMCA on a federal level, or otherwise the efforts are meaningless.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
Good point. Consider the application of Article VI of the Constitution, the Supremacy Clause:
See:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constit
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution
As FindLaw explains:
See http://supreme.lp.findlaw.com/constitution/articl
Only Women Bleed (Sex, Sharia remix)
If Lexmark (or HP or whoever) makes a product and they say that for warranty purposes you have to use their own crappy ink/toner -- all this upfront, I don't see a big deal why it is a consumer victory as touted. I surely agree that a refill helps in cost cutting, but I have also seen tons of printers (both inkjet and laser) with ink/toner spilt all over their innards just because ppl didn't want use a decent cartridge / toner. This is when they bring their product in for warranty "replacement" since their ink/toner is "smudging", "not printing right" , "sucks" or something of that nature.
.....
As long as they let the consumer know this in advance and you have a choice not to buy this product no one is in trouble are they?
Ofcourse you may not have much choice for buying from someone besides Lexmark & Canon & HP but then thats a DIFFERENT problem
-- everyones not everybody and neither is everybody like everyone.
I don't really print a lot of stuff so I just bought my first replacement ink cartage for my printer of 4years about a week ago, And my surprise the ink cartage was 32$!
What makes ink cart rages so high in price? Supply and demand or does it really cost that much to make one.
You'll see that it probably doesn't even apply to North Carolina
"Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
If you have a G4 or whatever you DO have a choice of OS. Either an Apple OS or Linux or Darwin.
w are. htmlo ftware .htmls _softwa re.html
If you buy a computer from SGI what OS choice do you have when you order it? For the workstation, it don't look like it
http://www.sgi.com/workstations/fuel/sys_soft
http://www.sgi.com/workstations/tezro/sys_s
http://www.sgi.com/workstations/octane2/sy
What Lexmark is doing and what Apple/Sun/SGI are doing is like comparing Apples and Oranges.
Yea, when you buy a G4 you get stuck with OS X and Classic. But Apple doesn't use the DMCA to keep you from installing Linux on the box.
Is it really the job of government to pass such narrow, precise laws like this? Or, instead, should they be passing higher-level laws which a) most of us can even keep in our heads to start with and b) cover a whole lot of smaller, more specific cases?
I wonder how many consumers get to the point where they realize that buying a new printer each time is about as effective as trying to buy OEM ink cartridges.
I was in Best Buy yesterday, and they had an inkjet printer on sale for $39. It has been a while since I bought an inkjet cartridge (company supplied laser printer), but I believe it was almost that expensive.
That is the problem with a highly competitive razor/razor-blade model - as soon as the razors get really cheap due to competition, you get the the point where you start competing with the blades in price.
I wonder how long before you see "intro" ink cartridges (with only like 25% filled) being supplied with the original printer?
- (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
HP inkjet printers don't have ink cartridges. They instead have cartridges with both print heads and ink. Which is why nobody sells non-HP cartridges; they don't have any legal way to do the print heads. This legislation finally gets past that, but it would have to be a federal law to provide enough scale so anyone could create such a product (unless a group in NC started selling HP-compatible cartridges to the rest of the country, which isn't going to happen).
Hopefully this initiative will get other states to create similar new laws. Obviously the states that manufacture HP and other printers will be the ones who try to block anything.
In past, the U.S. has been reluctant to mess around with the free market. What's going on here? Most consumers understand the concept of voting with their pocketbook. If a company screws you around, you stop buying their product. I think the rise of Japanese car makers over American is a demonstration of that principle. Let the market punish Lexmark.
Simply put, NC can legislate all it wants, but as long as the DMCA (or other conflicting federal statute) is on the books, any laws they write aren't worth the refilled ink they are printed with. (Pardon the bad pun, but I couldn't resist.)
Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.
The Lexmark inkjet cartridge problem is based on abusing copyright rather than trademark, but it seems quite possible that a court would find that because Lexmark has unnecessarily forced their competitors to use their copyright in order to make a compatible cartridge, they are to blame for the resulting copyright infringement.
Yeah. I'm a quasi-liberterian.
Its a bit of a tug-o-war on that. Specific laws like this seem to only chip away at the larger problems. But larger, more general laws leave a lot of room for interpertation and or abuse. (insert the name of your favorite blanket regulations here)
I hear ya though, there has to be a better way than addressing each and every case. Maybe, if law makers would go after the DMCA itself, rather than running around and trying to filter through all of its vast twisting tendrils individualy. This is a good first step though. Maybe more will follow suit, and maybe eventualy, somebody in congress will see the DMCA for what it really is...
On Wall Street they say "buy low, sell high" On the pad we say, "buy high, sell high" Isn't that somehow better?
It had to happen in North Carolina, because politics is ultimately about local issues. Static Control Components of Sanford, (close to Raleigh) employs 1200, and might even more if business grows. The Company had enough pull in the State to get the law passed.
And I think this should be a lesson for other issues too ... Abstractions have to come down to one or few test cases where the rubber hits the road .... guess RIAA's thousands points of lawsuits will also meet such a fate from the localities where the lawsuits draw first blood.
I would be foolish enough to say to RIAA "Bring 'em on" but I think that they should expect the unexpected when the finally go for it.
To see a world in a grain of sand, and then to step back and see the beach where the sand lies
Last time I checked Canon doesn't sue 3rd party competitors
& uses a seperate tank for each color (less waste)
& doesn't throw around the DMCA
& tells you to check your ink level by LOOKING AT THE CARTRIDGE (as it should be).
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but from my recent research I found Canon to be the most reasonable (yes, I hated them as much as everyone else 5 years ago).
"Apple must leave the choice of OS to customers - right now you still have to pay for OSX when you are buying Mac even if you plan to use Mac with Linux or BeOS or BSD."
Apple doesn't prevent you from using a different OS, though. That's like saying Lexmark shouldn't include an ink cartridge with the printer when you buy it -- if nothing prevents you from changing it, I don't see why it would be a problem.
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It appears the bill doesn't address the DMCA problem. As the article states:
(emphasis added) http://www.heraldsun.com/state/6-371743.html
It appears the North Carolina law simply declares void contractual agreements not to refill printer ink cartridges as being against the public policy of the state. While this might be necessary for such refilling to be legal, it does not appear that this law is by itself sufficient to make it legal.
The law does not address the DMCA problem. That is, even if in North Carolina a contractual provision cannot prevent someone from refilling ink cartridges because said provision is void under this North Carolina law, this doesn't prevent a printer manufacturer from filing a DMCA claim against a company that makes the refilling kits.
Under the Supremacy Clause (Article VI of the Constitution), the State of North Carolina may have been unable to address the DMCA issue, and indeed may have recognized that fact. Article VI provides:
See:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constit
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution
As FindLaw explains:
See http://supreme.lp.findlaw.com/constitution/articl
I have to wonder if this legislation will accomplish anything. I also have to wonder if the legislature knew that it might not accomplish anything when they passed it.
Only Women Bleed (Sex, Sharia remix)
The thing that continues to be overlooked by the editors here:
The chipped cartridges, are NOT the only option for these printers.
There are 2 sets of cartridges that Lexmark sells. One set, is chipped for single use, and then you're obligated to return the cartridge back to Lexmark for them to refurbish, etc. They call it a "pre-bate" basically they are rebating you for returning the empty, at the time of purchase.
If you want to reuse/refill, etc yourself, then you can buy the non-prebated inks. And then you can just go hog wild.
Caveat Emptor.
"Politicians are interested in people. Not that this is always a virtue. Fleas are interested in dogs." P.J. O'Rourke
As far as I can tell from reading the description of the law (IANAL), they made it illegal to enforce the ban on cartridge refills, and it probably does conflict with federal law. What they should have done, with no conflict with the federal statute, was to ban the sale of printers with that sort of restriction. AFAIK a state can ban the sale of various items on whatever grounds it feels are correct, and the feds have nothing to say about it.
The company I worked for had to pull out of the consumer market(both ink and toner based) because they couldn't keep losing money on lost revenue due to generic cartridges. So now there is less choice in the toner and ink jet printers.
My last ink jet screwed up because of the damn refillable cartridges. My current ink jet works great with name-brand cartridges.
....... Thus ends my attempt at wit or whatever
They don't have to try to force Lexmark to allow others to use their copyrights (which would be an attempt to supersede federal copyright law) -- instead they can simply say that it is illegal for printer manufacturers to make their cartridges such that copyrighted material is necessary for their operation. Then nobody could copy Lexmark's cartridges, but they couldn't legally sell them in the state either. But their copyright would still be protected.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
I understand why these companies want to prevent others from stealing this cash cow. You're talking about huge amounts of money just for ink. I can't remember where I read it but there was a story about ink being 3 times more expensive than a fine wine or something like that. Maybe it was here? It's fucking ink so I don't know why it's so expensive.
It could be all of the companies in collusion with one another to keep the prices high.
We should boycott Lexmark and while we're at it boycott Epson for being busted by joint tests by several European consumer groups indicating that Epson ink cartridges prematurely block printers from churning out more pages even when there is enough ink to keep going.
Here's the story on that con
I think it'd be less painful to my pocket book if they could figure out how to turn my blood into ink from a simple IV...
You aren't free to do anything, until you've lost everything.
The whole idea in the current market is to sell cheap printers that become mechanisms to sell expensive ink jet cartridges. The goal is to sell as many expensive cartridges as possible; so you find marketers playing stupid games like not filling the cartridges to capacity, etc..
The result of this is simply a great deal of garbage that consumers have to pay to haul away.
I doubt that toner and ink cartridges are really the most environmentally friendly things in the landfills. I suspect the fewer we toss out the better.
My brain fart du jour is that it would be great if industries had to pick up the tab for the garbage they create. Lenmark and other competitors in the industry would have to pay a disposal fee that could be distributed to landfills to cover costs.
If industry had to pay for the waste up front, there would be a hope that they would design products that create less waste product.
As you point out, the industry is really about putting ink (which is relatively inexpensive) on paper. All the extra packaging, cartridge parts, etc., that get produced and sold in this game are waste.
What keeps some other company from making cheap razor blades compatible with my Mach 3 razor?
I would like to point out, for the benefit of those who didn't notice, that Apple's firmware is an open standard.
This whole industry is based upon one thing. Everyone knows that these companys literally give you the printer only to make the money back on the refill cartridges. If they were to market the printers differntly, go back to making quality machines rather than things that print for a few years then die, and aren't fixing cause it's cheaper to replace we and the enviornment would win. We would get cheaper ink cartridges, and higher quality ink jet printers, thus lasting us a lot longer and saving our landfills and being green in the same process. If the companys were even smarter, they would have a exchange policy for old cartridges, or offer refill kits themselves.
Very rarely should we seek government intervention. Standard Oil, Ma' Bell, Microsoft -- these are issues for the feds.
The nice thing is, this is a state government taking action. Whether it's a "real good move" or not is slightly debatable, but it is good to see a state government doing what it should... responding to the needs / wants of it's constituents.
The whole idea of limiting the power of the federal government is based on the idea that most decision making should happen at a level that's closer to the people it affects - ie, state and local government.
// TODO: Insert Cool Sig
"How will this benefit Apple?"
How will preventing Lexmark from only allowing Lexmark ink to be used benefit Lexmark?
"How will it benefit consumers?"
The same way as allowing competition for ink; cheaper prices, more variety.
It's actually a case of using a technological means, to enforce a contract.
The cartridges in question are sold at a discounted price, called a Prebate. You get a cheaper cartridge with the understanding that you will return it when empty, to Lexmark. If you pay for a full price cartridge, you're more than welcome to refill it, at will.
It's a prefectly legitmate means of enforcing the terms of sale that the consumer agreed to, when he bought the discounted ink.
"Politicians are interested in people. Not that this is always a virtue. Fleas are interested in dogs." P.J. O'Rourke
Uh, hello. Care to think this through a bit? Don't you think the DMCA constitutes the government interfering in the market? If the federal government wasn't interfering in the right of people to reverse engineer products like Lexmarks printer cartridges, this legislation wouldn't be necessary. I agree that the free market is a better solution than government interference most of the time, but Lexmark using the DMCA to stifle competition isn't the free market.
"The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.
That makes it illegal for company x to use the DMCA to prevent a 3rd party company making hardware or software compatible with company x's hardware.
Or you could just not buy a lexmark printer. Let the market descide, don't legislate to death.
I would agree with you except for one thing. Lexmark is using the DMCA to stop people from refilling ink cartridges. There's a crypto widget in cartridge that contains copyrighted info. Can't duplicate it. Can't reset it. Do so and it's "legislated to death time". The best outcome would be taking the DMCA behind the barn and having either the Supreme Court or Congress shoot it through the head. Since the media conglomerates and electronics monopolists won't permit the death of their dream come true, I'll take what North Carolina is doing as a consolation prize.
They should just secede.
A less drastic step would be to simply levy a state tax on non-refillable cartridges and/or printers that use them. States levy widely varrying taxes on stuff all the time. Virginia's tobacco tax is a heck of a lot lower than say... New York's.
So if the issue comes up, they should just re-write it as a really high tax on printers that use non-refillable cartridges. There's precedent for the tax, and precedent for the tax widely varying from state-to-state. However, I don't think there is precedent for the tax being so high that it effectively kills the market. Anybody know?
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
OK, Apple is both a hardware and a software company, correct?
Apple hardware counts for what, 3% of the consumer market? I don't know for sure, but its at least 2%-ish and not more than 5%-ish.
Now. Apple makes Mac computers. Mac computers cost more than PCs per unit of computing power.
Yes, I will grant, for the sake of argument, that Mac's G4 architecture is superior to that of, say Intel's P4 and P4-Xeon.
But, for approximately the price of a high-end G4 ~1Ghz, I could easily get a 3.06Ghz P4 system, and likely even a dual 2.4 or 2.8 Xeon system...
Mac cloning would put downward pressure on the hardware prices. Suddenly Macs would not cost thousands of dollars while PCs cost only hundreds.
Thus, it is likely that Mac hardware would take a larger chunk of the market, perhaps, say, 10-15% of the total market.
That means that Apple could sell 3-5 times as many copies of the latest version of OS X. And many more copies of all their other software.
Thus, Apple could become a real player in the marketplace, instead of the little guy on the side.
And, correect me if I'm wrong, but it would not be a crime (under the DMCA or any other law) to reverse engineer the core Mac architecture and produce a compatible product.
On the other hand, it would be a violation of the DMCA to reverse engineer the print cartridges in the same manner because the DMCA protects the copyright protected code.
Oh, and another thing. If you've ever read the text of the DMCA, you will find that it does not prohibit the circumventing of access control mechanisms, but only the circumvention of EFFECTIVE access control mechanisms. (by my reading, IANAL)
If you can prove that the Lexmark mechanism is ineffective (as stands) then you should be home free as far as circumvention is concerned...
but the courts have yet to define "effective" here
I don't think there is precedent for the tax being so high that it effectively kills the market.
They happen all the time. Ask anybody who has studied international economics about "prohibitive tariffs," and you'll learn the full story.
Will I retire or break 10K?
Actually, Apple used DMCA to keep Other World Computing from patching iDVD so it'd work with other external and internal DVD-RWs
That's all I found from looking for Apple DMCA and Apple DMCA ROM
Get one at Wal-Mart and when the ink runs out - return it and get a new one, complete with a new ink cartridge. Wal-mart employees could care less. Just give some lame-ass excuse.
If manufacturers want to play this game, let's play! HP & Lexmark will have a new definition for "loss leader."
***
Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
Seems like North Carolina forgot about a little thing in the Constitution called the Supremacy Clause.
In general, states can't nullify federal laws, but they can make federal laws much harder to enforce. For example, the City of Arcata banned compliance with the "optional" suggestions of the USAPATRIOT act.
Federal law, 17 USC 1201: "No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title." That is, you can't sell devices that defeat DRM.
Hypothetical state law: "No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that contains one or more technological measures that effectively control access to a work, as defined in Title 17, United States Code, section 1201, if the device's packaging does not carry a conspicuous label that discloses the restrictions enforced by such measures." That is, you can't sell DRM that isn't labeled.
I don't see a supremacy problem here. The federal law bans black boxes; the state law merely requires labeling.
Will I retire or break 10K?
making a product for sale by mutual consent
Unless the products that contain DRM are conspicuously labeled as such, how can you argue that the buyer had granted an informed consent? The labeling on a product, especially a consumer product, is the only place I can think of where a contract's Offer can be made.
Will I retire or break 10K?
Because of the practical design of Canon's print systems (replaceable print heads with reasonably-priced separate ink cartridges), I strongly recommend Canon inkjet printers to anybody who uses Windows and wants an inkjet printer. However, I've read that Canon has given no help in publishing enough documentation to let Microsoft's competitors develop drivers to make recent Canon inkjet printers work on operating systems other than Windows.
Will I retire or break 10K?
I have seen printers damaged from using 3rd Party Ink. Because they were using the cheap stuff and the fact that their printer broke. They decided that because their printer keeps on having trouble that they wont buy that printer again. While if they used the real ink the printer could have used for many more years. While there are good 3rd party Ink out their. But there are a bunch of Rip Offs that hurt the printer and this is like slander towards the printer maker.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
The DMCA does contain such a provision, codified as 17 USC 1201(f), but the courts have in effect nullified it in Universal v. Reimerdes by refusing to recognize DeCSS as having been "reverse engineered for purposes of interoperability".
Will I retire or break 10K?
This is where you are wrong. Apple is a hardware company that writes their own OS and software.
Apple makes their money on hardware sales. Period. Remeber the clone wars? Power Computing, Umax and the others qucikly developed better and more powerful machines than Apple. This almost killed them. They spent more time and money updating the OS (no profit here) while everyone purchased everyone elses hardware. if Steve Jobs had not come back in the fold and killed the clones Apple wouldn't be here today. Don't get me wrong, I was as pissed off as everyone else when the clones were killed but in the long run I now see it was the right thing to do. This same reasoning goes to why you will never see OSX on x86.
Somewhere you've glossed over the fact that companies that create disposable junk increase the wear and tear on our natural environment.
Consider printer ink which you "could" buy by the liter. Instead, now we've got to buy the box, the plastic sealing, and the heavy plastic ink cartridge.
Waste, pure waste. Lexmark should be held accountable!
+100
... in the lower bucks/cost category? One that works very well with linux, and gets good mileage with the ink?
The laserjet 4 is prone to having the "accordion" jams where the paper gets jammed, and when you pull it out from the back, it is folded in an accordion shape. You can fix this yourself by installing new upper rollers. The kits are about $25, and it takes about a half hour to install them. Since I did this to my printer, it hasn't jammed.
I read you last work on the XHJ45 cartridge...you are such a hack...it was an obvious rip-off of the old CR-443 bubble jet chip. Maybe when you learn to write some original chip's you'll make it big, but until then, you'll just be another hack.
Actually, I believe a Mac ROM is not necessarily required to boot Mac OS. A Linux/PPC machine can run an VM program called Mac-on-Linux. This allows a Mac OS (or, I believe, any other PPC OS) to run as a guest OS under Linux. This isn't quite having the ability to boot directly into Mac OS without a ROM, but it does mean that someone has RE'd the ROM (or otherwise figured out a way around it)
Look at IBM or Intel. Compaq reverse enginnered IBM's BIOS.
Do they just stop selling cartridges in North Carolina altogether, and cede all the sales to clone cartridge manufacturers? Do they make special cartridge just for sale in NC? Do they just keep up business as usual and dare NC to come after them?
I am NOT a man!
I am a free number!
when you need them. Because people have exactly this type of attitude. Buy printer... printer sucks down in... find out new ink (colour+b&w) costs nearly as much as the printer, or even more.
Printer ends up in landfill... I'm sure there are a lot of non-environmentally friendly components.
So why aren't/weren't the environmentalists all over Lexmark's ass for this... they know it's what happens?!
Maybe you didn't read the parent post carefully enough...
He made TWO points.
The first was that you should be able to buy a Mac without having to pay for OS X. The second was that you should be able to make clones.
The first was the one that I was rebuking in my post. The second is the one you are talking about.
The second point is also bunk however. It is impossible to draw a good parallel between printers/ink and computers/operating systems. And, anyway, as Apple is not involved in anti-competitive behavior of note as they are a niche player.
Justin Dubs
Nobody has ever actually come out and officially said it, but Apple is under severe licensing restrictions with regard to MPEG-2. The MPEG-2 license accounts for much of the cost of QuicktimePro (QTPro is $25, MPEG-2 is $10-$20 of that). Since iDVD does MPEG-2 encoding, Apple has to pay a fee for every copy of iDVD that is burning DVDs. The OWC product got around that and could have gotten Apple in an expensive court case.
The DMCA was just the "appropriate" tool for the job in the opinion of Apple's legal team.
Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
> Or you could just not buy a lexmark printer. Let the market descide, don't legislate to death.
A take a couple issues with your statement:
1. Most, if not all, inkjet vendors practice this. In fact an inkjet vendor that didn't practice this would be cut out of the market because he would have to charge the real cost of the printer. Thus, everyone is undercutting each other and passing the cost in another form. This is arguably anti-competitve behavior and undercutting to drive someone out of business in many situations has been ruled to be anti-competitive.
2. The consumer may or may not know what ink really costs. Its important to know the mark-up and using ignorance to overcharge on such a level is ethically dubious. Worse, there is nothing the consumer can do except move onto other technologies like laser printers. Now, imagine if the $20 laser printer came out except toner was $150 and it had some BS DRM attached to it. Now what do you do? Move to a copy machine?
This is simply bad business and even in the US this can be seen as illegal undercutting.
3. Legislation like the DMCA gives DRM protected ink a ridiculous amount of legislative protections. In other words the law is part of the problem and claiming "dont change the laws" is silly when a law like the DMCA exists.
The problem with these old beasts is that they stayed powered up and hot to be able to print quickly at any time. OK if you are in an air conditioned office and really doing a lot of printing. However, if you have one one your home system you might not even print every day, but the electricity the thing will cost you to run day in and day out (not counting extra A/C costs) will be a lot more than the cost of a newer lower power printer. The old beasts just were not very "green". Consider the number like yours still in use, and it's a lot of wasted fule and associated polution just to have a printer ideling so that it can print quickly if someone wants to print. And many people (like me) may not have printed anything all day.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
The thing is, it doesn't have to. Copyright law clearly has an exception for useful articles or things that provide a utilitarian function, so exactly the thing that Lexmark is trying to protect under a claim of copyright is likely voided by this exception. See more details of this here.
Note also that this same exception might well exclude the "copyrighted" code that Microsoft claims is a copyright violation in X-box mod chips. Copyright was never intended for this sort of thing, and the exception makes it pretty clear that the writers of the law didn't want copyright to be abused this way.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
I bought G3 ROMs before.
I had an older G3 which couldn't handle slave on the IDE bus so I got a newer rev ROM.
Secondly, the DMCA issue is nonsequintor when it comes to the issue of Apple Computer, Inc. The parent post is arguing about Apple and how the same tactics (government-wise) should be used against them. As someone else pointed out, it's "apples to oranges." Apple deserves absolutely no government intervention. There is no precident and neither should there be. They are playing fair.
The Mac ROMs were reverse-engineered long ago using a white-box approach - the publicly available API descriptions from Inside Macintosh were used to get a start and then they just messed with it until it worked. There was a Mac-on-Unix emulator, damn, I've forgotten the name, but it came out around 1990. Apple killed it the old-fashioned way - they bought it, circa 1996. I think portions of it made their way into the Blue Box.
Apple doesn't license MacOS to OEMs. That's how they keep people from making Mac clones. Most people want to buy a machine with an OS, not a bare box and then have to schlep over to the Apple Store to buy OS X.
Apple does not have a monopoly on the desktop market. MS does. It's a whole different ball game.
The printer companies can start selling ink for really cheap - they'll just have to charge us an extra $200 or so for the printer! Wow, nobody would whine about that! People LOVE it when the initial purchase is huge!
:P
Seriously, though, here's my ideal model: cartridges should be at least 25% cheaper, printers should cost 15% more, and people should stop throwing away USB cables (they do it ALL THE TIME, it's really annoying). Also the companies that make the printers should have some sort of exchange program wherein you can drop off your old cartidges somewhere and get a '10% off your next ink cartridge purchase' coupon or something. There. Things are cheaper, people are still making money, and there's less waste. But I know nothing about business, just like the rest of you, so now I'm going to sleep.
Chee, if you did that, you'd have ... a PEE CEE!!!!
So if you want a PEE CEE, why not just buy one? You can get one CHEAPER! Go for it, man!
Dell operators are waiting for your call!
Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it.
Those who forget the past are doomed
So what are some other pieces of computer equipment from antiquity that people still use because they're made better than anything today?
Personally, I have a Keytronics keyboard from 1990 that still works great, though the plastic has all yellowed.
I also have an old Teac 3.5" floppy drive from around '92 that works fine; every time I've built a new system I've reused this drive.
I also have a Mitsumi 5.25" floppy drive that worked fine last time I tried it, but I had to take it out because I just never used it anymore...
More simply put, you don't use up your firmware and have to replentish it every other week...
Another way of looking at it is that an operating system represents a considerable intellectual property investment, whereas the means by which ink cartridges are filled does not.
my password really is 'stinkypants'
You really shouldn't have to do this. How many little laws have to be created to sidestep 'unintended' consequences of the one law to rule them all before it can be declared a Bad Law?
Umm...Executor?
YFI
-uso.
Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
When my lexmark ink is over, I buy another printer!
I have a load of them...
I've had a Samsung ML-1430 for a few months now, and I am very pleased with it. It prints quickly and with good quality. Even with the toner-saving feature on, the text is clear and crisp.
It prints quickly. It's at least as fast as most copiers. Also, if you don't have enough paper, it just stops printing until you add more and then it automatically starts printing. Likewise, if you try to print something while it is off, it will start printing automatically when you turn it on (at least under Windows XP).
I just have one small complaint. There is not an easy way to duplex (or print in book format - whatever you want to call it). You have to figure out whether to print the odd pages or even pages reversed, and figure out which to reverse.
However, I still give it a strong recomendation.
If you have a G4 or whatever you DO have a choice of OS. Either an Apple OS or Linux or Darwin.
w are. htmlo ftware .htmls _softwa re.html
If you buy a computer from SGI what OS choice do you have when you order it? For the workstation, it don't look like it
http://www.sgi.com/workstations/fuel/sys_soft
http://www.sgi.com/workstations/tezro/sys_s
http://www.sgi.com/workstations/octane2/sy
Unless you hadn't paved the way and I hadn't the karma to burn I wouldn't bother, but...
If you buy a computer from XXXX what OS choice do you have when you order it?
Insert any pc hw vendor there and you know the answer.
Few examples:
IBM
Dell
HP (uses servlets so the link's not direct, but try customizing a desktop/notbook from there...)
etc...
1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
That's like saying Lexmark shouldn't include an ink cartridge with the printer when you buy it -- if nothing prevents you from changing it, I don't see why it would be a problem.
:
Not trying to flame here, but this is exaclty how things are
s/Lexmark/ANY PC HW VENDOR/
s/an ink cartridge/a Microsoft OS/
s/printer/computer/
s/don't//
If I'm never gonna use it I don't want to pay for it.
1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
Perhaps this will be a useful test case to go all the way up to the Federal Supreme Court and get the DMCA thrown out on anti-trust or other grounds. Or perhaps it will generate enough publicity to get the public worked up in a lather of rage at being ripped-offed by Lexmark (and others). Either way, its good news and we can hope it comes off well.
If you can't see how competition would benefit consumers perhaps you should think a little more about it.
Not all conservatives are stupid,
but it is true that most stupid people are conservative.
- Hume
Ever hear of a little company called Microsoft? They only sell the OS. Wait, check that, they only lease the OS. By leaving the hardware to clones, you sell more computers. Soon the profit from selling the OS will far, far eclipse the profit from hardware. In short, Apple would radically expand it's marketshare and make more money.
How will it benefit consumers?
Lower cost Macs with the same quality. You got a problem with that?
It was only unprofitable because Apple was inflexable. They insisted on staying in the hardware business while the clones were beating them senseless. If they dumped the hardware business and concentrated on software, they would have been massively profitable.
I smell a new market for those mod chip makers.
While the Great Depression of 1929 was certainly caused in large part by gov't intervention (the low interest rates of the late twenties which you cite, and the Smoot-Hawley tarrifs), you should note that when we had a laissez faire banking system, things were even worse. Most people have grandparents who remember the Depression of the 30's, so they know about it. However, we also had significant depressions and bank runs in 1893 and 1907, which were ~why~ the Federal Reserve system was set up. Remember that old story about J.P. Morgan locking all the big players in a room until they bailed out the stock market ? (pdf) See a quick summary here . The fact is that the business cycle has never been repealed, no matter how many times (1920's, 1990's) it has been predicted to be.
This worked well in germany with toy manufacturers. They were required to pick up the tab for any packaging that ended up in the municipal waste stream. Within weeks the companies were selling just the Barbie doll and not the giant cardboard box and plastic. What, was the Barbie doll going to spoil sitting there?
What many people don't realize is that a lot of our environmental problems are caused by regulatory environments that allow companies to shove costs off onto the government. When a cost is external, it doesn't affect the company's actions. When the cost is internalized and suddenly it makes economic sense to recycle components and use less packaging, then the environmentally correct action flows naturally. You can't impose environmental requirements that add cost, it doesn't work very well. You CAN make a company pay the real cost of disposing of its waste, and being motivated by profit, get companies to make the right decisions for economic reasons.
Apple uses the DMCA to keep other companies from reverse engineering their BIOS though, and creating Mac Clones.
Isn't their "BIOS" really an OpenBoot PROM?
OpenBoot PROM is an IEEE standard, IIRC, and Sun, for example, has used OBP their hardware since the late 80's or early 90's. I haven't used the Mac version, but it is really nifty to plug a serial console into a Sun and do a diagnostics boot. Also, the OBP makes x86-style hacks like lilo unneccessary, thanks to devaliases and persistent NVRAM storage.
Healthcare article at Kuro5hin
How will this benefit Apple?
Since when is legislations' primary intend to benefit corporations? I realize it often does, and that congress critters are willing to bend over and squeal like a pig if the money is right, but I doubt that should be a primary consideration when deciding if a certain piece of legislation is 'good' or 'bad'.
How will it benefit consumers?
1) Competition for costumers will lower the price and/or increase the guality.
2) Lower price and/or increased quality should attract more customers from the Wintel faction.
3) More users will make developing for the platform more attractive.
4) More apps, games, productivity software will make the platform more attractive to customers - which will be good for Apple. See your first question.
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
I have to admit you have a point there. Their hardware is nowhere near as impressive as their software is. I think what Apple fears from the clone market is that if they stop making hardware, then they *ARE* toast if everyone stops making Macs.
Or they could just do what Intel does and get into the system OEM business, and stop selling "Apple" branded Mac's.
Nah, never happen.
1. Dump the huge hardware section of your company.
2. ???
3. Profit!
we are building a religion
a limited edition
we are now accepting callers
for these pendant key chains
Um, wasn't it Phoenix Technologies that reverse engineered IBM's BIOS?
we are building a religion
a limited edition
we are now accepting callers
for these pendant key chains
This law only applies IN North Carolina, there's no interstate commerce involved. Hence, no conflict with the DMCA or any other federal law because it's not in their jurisdiction. The law doesn't say anything about what goes on in other states, and doesn't affect federal courts. So, what this means is that a local company - one with offices/plants/etc ONLY in North Carolina can make these refill cartridges and sell them like mad. They can't be tried in federal court because there's no interstate commerce, and thus no jurisdiction. Now, a national company couldn't do this, they could still be subject to DMCA suits in federal court - but there's nothing preventing them from spinning off a unit to pursue this market. And of course the company can't sell them across state lines without coming into federal jurisdiction again, so this is no benefit to the rest of us except as a motivator to write our legislatures. If similar laws were enacted in the majority of states (and what voter wouldn't be in favor of this?) then Lexmark's victory in federal court would be largely void.
we're now reduced to passing laws, because customers are stupid sheep that won't take the time to inform themselves?
"Politicians are interested in people. Not that this is always a virtue. Fleas are interested in dogs." P.J. O'Rourke
Apple is a hardware company...
... while everyone purchased everyone elses hardware.
... I now see it was the right thing to do.
Apple makes their money on hardware sales. Period.
Power Computing, Umax and the others qucikly [sic]developed better and more powerful machines than Apple. (my emphasis)
Do I understand you to be saying Apple can't compete in their own area of expertise in an open market?
The right thing for Apple to do FOR APPLE. For consumers, for users, for future innovations, for "better and more powerful machines" the wrong thing to do.
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
the compaq enginers who did it, left compaq to form phoenix tech.
>I guess you have never heard of the compaq BIOS >reverse engineering that started the whole x86 PC >platform. (Yes, started it, because without out >this reverse engineering, x86 would have never been >remotely popular like it is today)
And x86 being popular is a good thing why?
PC = Personal Computer.
"Personal Computer" is a description of how a machine is used, not the platform.
Many (I would guess most) APPLE computers ARE used as a PC.
+2,FUNNY? Don't give that moderator any more points, (S)he doesn't know what funny is!
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
"Ink (colour+b&w) costs nearly as much as the printer" is a gross understatement.
I was at my local Wal-Mart recently, and checked some prices.
New Lexmark printer: $36
Black ink cartridge for it: $35
Color ink cartridge for it: $38
So a pair of cartridges costs TWICE as much as the printer.
You might think that throwing out the printer whenever you run out of ink and buying a new one is the best bet, but you're missing one important element: the printers come with "starter" ink cartridges, which contain considerably less ink than the retail cartridges -- I'd guess they come about 1/4 full.
:-)
No problem. It got modded to -1, Troll anyway. Hehe.
Justin Dubs
Get one at Wal-Mart and when the ink runs out - return it and get a new one, complete with a new ink cartridge
This is brilliant, although I'd skip the "lame-ass excuse". You don't need it. Their store policy is 90 days satisfaction guaranteed. The magic words are "I wasn't satisfied". Be vague, be evasive, you don't need any other reason than that. If you are pressed for details, or asked if it's defective, say "No, it just didn't meet my expectations" or "it doesn't fulfill my needs". Just keep restating the same thing in different ways until they give in.
As the poster said, the Wal-Mart "associates" usually don't care, and won't need a lot of convincing.
A lot of people have replied that this is illegal or immoral; I'm not so sure. As long as you don't lie about it I think you'd be ok. Remember that Wal-Mart will not bear the cost in any case, they'll make Lexmark or HP pay for the replacement. If they have to handle too many returns they may eventually decide to stop selling those brands - wouldn't that be a kick in the ass!
I am an American who is going to cry that Slashdot is too U.S.-centric.
Does the rest of the world get this same treatment on inkjets? Or is it a special treat for us yankee doodle dandies?
This has me about ready to start an import business. Somebody somewhere makes workhorse printers which have ink selling for less than the price of caviar. Or would I already have competition in this field?
Rule of the open mind
People who are resistant to change cannot resist change for the worst.
Because it was dirty. It worked perfectly, but looked like it had been installed in a coal crushing factory.
If tits were wings it'd be flying around.