On 06/27/2012 09:06 AM, Drew Van Zandt wrote:
Increases the barrier to entry in business.
I took some to think about this response, and the more I think about it, the more I see it as FUD. This is the type of answer corporations that want to extend their control over our property give. Seeing as this is a discussion, I get to ask: how? It seems to me, *MORE* effort needs to be made to lock down these devices than it does to open them up.


That's bad for small businesses, matters less for large ones.

Again, the words "bad" "small business" but no facts. No argument. Just FUD.

Maybe this is what discourse is in 21st century USA, but it is still an empty non-argument.

**
**Drew Van Zandt**
**Artisan's Asylum Craft Lead, Electronics & Robotics
Cam # US2010035593 (**M:**Liam Hopkins **R:**Bastian Rotgeld)
******Domain Coordinator, MA-003-D.  Masquerade aVST ****
**



On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 9:03 AM, Mark Woodward <ma...@mohawksoft.com <mailto:ma...@mohawksoft.com>> wrote:

    We've heard the ads on the radio for and against the "Right to
    Repair" law. This is a law that is intended to require automobile
    manufacturers to publish the technical specifications and the
    codes that the computers in your car produce for troubleshooting
    and repair.

    I was thinking, what about a "Right to Own" law, that requires
    that *all* electronics be documented, all "general purpose"
    computers i.e. not embedded like a microwave, but everything from
    video games to iphones, tablets and computers be "user
    serviceable." No locking out a user from doing what ever they want
    with stuff they own.

    Writing this law would be very tricky because you need a lot of
    legal intuition about the sort of attacks that will come at it
    from the likes of Apple and Microsoft, but also a lot of technical
    savvy to carefully define what is "general purpose" and what is
    "dedicated" and what the actual limits are. We want to protect
    innovation, but not at the expense of civil rights of ownership.
    For instance, we don't need to see the source code to Windows 8,
    be we damn well should be able to boot Linux or FreeBSD or
    whatever. We should be able to run what ever program we want on an
    iPhone or Android. These devices are our property, we paid for
    them, we are legally responsible for what is on them, we should
    have the ability to control them.

    When I was a kid, almost *all* devices, from washing machines to
    televisions, had a schematic inside the case. CP/M came with the
    source code. We have lost a lot of freedom to the corporations
    locking up our property. How much crap that would have otherwise
    been semi useful have we had to throw away?

    This is clearly a case where the invisible hand of capitalism will
    not help and an obvious case where regulation must. Agree?
    Disagree? it would be hard to find a politician who would even
    back such a bill, but maybe we can get a referendum on the ballot.
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