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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday March 23 2017, @03:48PM   Printer-friendly
from the and-copyright-while-you're-there dept.

Today, the Supreme Court heard arguments in a case that could allow companies to keep a dead hand of control over their products, even after you buy them.  The case, Impression Products v. Lexmark International, is on appeal from the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, who last year affirmed its own precedent allowing patent holders to restrict how consumers can use the products they buy. That decision, and the precedent it relied on, departs from long established legal rules that safeguard consumers and enable innovation.

When you buy something physical—a toaster, a book, or a printer, for example—you expect to be free to use it as you see fit: to adapt it to suit your needs, fix it when it breaks, re-use it, lend it, sell it, or give it away when you're done with it. Your freedom to do those things is a necessary aspect of your ownership of those objects. If you can't do them, because the seller or manufacturer has imposed restrictions or limitations on your use of the product, then you don't really own them. Traditionally, the law safeguards these freedoms by discouraging sellers from imposing certain conditions or restrictions on the sale of goods and property, and limiting the circumstances in which those restrictions may be imposed by contract.

But some companies are relentless in their quest to circumvent and undermine these protections. They want to control what end users of their products can do with the stuff they ostensibly own, by attaching restrictions and conditions on purchasers, locking down their products, and locking you (along with competitors and researchers) out. If they can do that through patent law, rather than ordinary contract, it would mean they could evade legal limits on contracts, and that any one using a product in violation of those restrictions (whether a consumer or competitor) could face harsh penalties for patent infringement.

If you refill the ink in your printer cartridges, you will go to jail?


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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 24 2017, @01:54PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 24 2017, @01:54PM (#483632)

    i agree with the killing part but i don't see how it's women's fault. it's greedy man-whores who are ruining the nation/world, women are just now getting their turn in smallish numbers.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 25 2017, @07:44AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 25 2017, @07:44AM (#484057)

    Women banned child brides in 1880.

    Then alchohol, and pretty much everything else a man might want.