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by oliwarner
1542 days ago
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Pay-walling software features —like this— means you also have to stop the user from modifying or maintaining the software running on the thing I own. Slightly reductive but if I can't do what I like with something I buy, is it really mine? If it's not, why am I expected to pay full price? Hopefully consumer rights will catch up, and make nonsense features like this go away. But I expect manufacturers to resist this as much as they can, probably tying it into certified safety systems and playing a "think of the children" argument. |
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Software is almost always licensed, not sold/owned.
>If it's not, why am I expected to pay full price?
This isn't really a good argument. For one, it implies that if it's on sale for black friday or whatever, that it's magically fine because you're no longer paying "full price". Moreover, the concept of a "full price" is nebulous at best. Suppose the "full price" of a product is $999,999,999, and the discounted price (with locked down hardware) is $1,000. I doubt that would alleviate your concerns.