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Did John Deere Just Swindle California's Farmers Out of Their Right to Repair? (wired.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a new Wired opinion piece by Kyle Wiens and Elizabeth Chamberlain from iFixit: A big California farmers' lobbying group just blithely signed away farmers' right to access or modify the source code of any farm equipment software. As an organization representing 2.5 million California agriculture jobs, the California Farm Bureau gave up the right to purchase repair parts without going through a dealer. Farmers can't change engine settings, can't retrofit old equipment with new features, and can't modify their tractors to meet new environmental standards on their own. Worse, the lobbyists are calling it a victory.... John Deere and friends had already made every single "concession" earlier this year...

Just after the California bill was introduced, the farm equipment manufacturers started circulating a flyer titled "Manufacturers and Dealers Support Commonsense Repair Solutions." In that document, they promised to provide manuals, guides, and other information by model year 2021. But the flyer insisted upon a distinction between a right to repair a vehicle and a right to modify software, a distinction that gets murky when software controls all of a tractor's operations. As Jason Koebler of Motherboard reported, that flyer is strikingly similar -- in some cases, identical word-for-word -- to the agreement the Farm Bureau just brokered...

Instead of presenting a unified right-to-repair front, this milquetoast agreement muddies the conversation. More worryingly, it could cement a cultural precedent for electronics manufacturers who want to block third-party repair technicians from accessing a device's software.

4 of 175 comments (clear)

  1. John Deere? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 5, Informative
    Right in the first sentence of TFS it says:

    A big California farmers' lobbying group just blithely signed away farmers' right to access or modify the source code of any farm equipment software.

    No swindle at all. Straight out agreement by the farmers' lobbying group.

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  2. Re: Depends on how they got the lobbying group by peragrin · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can't change a spark plugs and without a software override code on these tractors.

    Yes it is that bad.

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    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  3. Re:The capitalist solution? by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not like buying something like oil. It's capital investment and it affect the stuff you've already bought.

    This is Deere turning an occasional choice about which farmers do have choice into regular payments for which they won't have choice.

    This all reminds me of something Gandhi once said. A reporter asked him what he thought of Western Civilization, and he replied that he thought it would be a good idea. Capitalism only works because of competition, but companies do everything they can to avoid actually competing, for example making it hard to compare their products to other vendors (boy to vendors hate being in "commodity" businesses), or in this case by trying to make it difficult for customers to choose competitors for some transactions.

    And if it's legal to evade competiing, why not? The fact that this undermines the justification for capitalism isn't your problem. This is a situation where you need regulation to ensure a free market can operate the way its' suppose to.

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  4. Re:The capitalist solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obviously, that's stupid. The barriers-to-entry are too high in a market this mature. But then, you knew that.

    There is *nothing* un-capitalist about government regulation, so long as it is the right kind of regulation. Legislation that mandates that these software solutions be open and available for third-party modification is exactly the right kind of regulation that help keeps a market competitive.