Is it just how they think, or is it the reality of the business?
Would be cool if manufacturers would make old versions of sourcecode public after a couple of years, and the final version when a product goes out of production.
I think for a lot of software businesses there is a truism that "your competition doesn't want your code, they think you're morons and you think they're morons."
But in the hardware game there is a lot of counterfeiting. There is rarely any shame or consequence when it comes to outright IP theft. Making it easier to access the firmware makes it easier for someone to counterfeit your widget.
You think the public facing representatives (management etc.) are morons, because
you think their strategy for working in the same space sucks unless
you think your company is totally blowing it and you are on your way out
but you don't think their programmers are morons so much (except when you examine site and it performs worse than yours for obvious reasons that you fixed on yours) but
if they roll out a really cool feature you can implement in your product you will write code to implement that feature and not wish you had their code because anyway your stuff is incompatible codebases unless
you get bought by them or they get bought by you or you both merge because you are in fact compatible and this way something beautiful will emerge
Firmware and drivers are different though. If the firmware was totally locked down then the drivers would be no use for a clone and if the firmware was taken but the drivers were proprietary the clone could just use the exact same driver binary.
Revealed preferences show that
when given the choice among economically sustaiat options, customers prefer to pay value based pricing and to rebuy things they still use, instead of paying more upfront for forever products.
> when a product goes out of production.
By the time this happens, the company has lost their throwaway source code.
In terms of taking care of the environment and fighting planned obsolence, this should be mandatory. If you stop supporting your product, you must enable your customers to support themselves.
But in the hardware game there is a lot of counterfeiting. There is rarely any shame or consequence when it comes to outright IP theft. Making it easier to access the firmware makes it easier for someone to counterfeit your widget.