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posted by janrinok on Wednesday October 28 2015, @07:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the so-there dept.

An Anonymous Coward offers the following:

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/oct/28/its-ok-to-hack-your-own-car-us-copyright-authorities-rule

Car owners and security experts can tinker with automobile software without incurring US copyright liability, according to newly issued guidelines that were opposed by the auto industry.

The Library of Congress, which oversees the US Copyright Office, agreed with fair use advocates who argued that vehicle owners are entitled to modify their cars, which often involves altering software.

Automakers including General Motors and other vehicle manufacturers such as Deere & Co opposed the rules. They said vehicle owners could visit authorized repair shops for changes they may need to undertake.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by VanderDecken on Wednesday October 28 2015, @08:17PM

    by VanderDecken (5216) on Wednesday October 28 2015, @08:17PM (#255748)

    Despite outward appearances, I suspect it has less to do with real copyright issues and more to do with avoiding bad PR and forced recalls due to buggy, insecure, and *cough* misbehaving *cough* vehicle software. If you can sue security researchers (regardless of under what statute), problem solved, right?

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