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by belorn
4615 days ago
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I can take a car to a repair shop of my choice, and replace the breaks. This is not illegal, nor does it invalidate some kind of "warranty". If the break is found to cause safety risk, it is not the car manufacturer that is going to get into trouble. Why would there be a special warranty or safety concern replacing the software that control the break, but no warranty or safety concern replacing the physical breaks with custom ones? |
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My point was that since the burden is on the manufacturer to prove that they're denying a warranty claim due to a user's negligence or damage, manufacturers hate users modifying control software.
It's a lot easier to make a software change, damage a car, and reverse the change than it is to make a physical change, damage the car, and swap the part back before taking the part back to the dealer.
Plus, errors in software are much harder to spot. If I get a brake caliper bracket with a giant crack in it, I see the issue while I'm installing it and can send it back. If I download BillyJoe's Flash V1.65, I have to go to a lot more work to figure out if it's going to hurt me.