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Nest Reminds Customers That Ownership Isn't What It Used To Be (eff.org)

Alphabet-owned Nest recently announced that it will be turning off Revolv Hub next month. An anonymous reader shares an article on EFF, a privacy rights group: Nest Labs, a home automation company acquired by Google in 2014, will disable some of its customers' home automation control devices in May. This move is causing quite a stir among people who purchased the $300 Revolv Hub devices -- customers who reasonably expected that the promised "lifetime" of updates would enable the hardware they paid for to actually work, only to discover the manufacturer can turn their device into a useless brick when it so chooses. This is far from the first time that customers' software and electronics have been downgraded by manufacturers. Updates can disable features the customer paid for that have fallen out of favor with the vendor, as when Google disabled privacy settings on Android or Sony took away the ability to run GNU/Linux on a Playstation 3. Manufacturers can even render a device unusable until the customer "agrees" to new terms of use, as Nintendo did with the Wii U. Other software and devices, including some video games, are designed so they simply stop working when they can no longer dial home to a server run by the vendor.

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  1. Re:To any Canadians by CanEHdian · · Score: 1, Troll

    The province of Nova Scotia is actively petitioning with the Federal government to increase the amount of immigrants that are allowed in through the "provincial nomination" program. If you're English-speaking, had a good education/have relevant experience, you're more than welcome. And that's permanent residency we're talking about.

    --
    When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.