The End Of Ownership, Military Edition: Even The US Military Can't Fix Its Own Equipment Without Right To Repair Laws

from the copyright-laws-and-the-military dept

We’ve written many times about the right to repair and how various companies have basically destroyed the concept of ownership by putting all sorts of post-purchase restrictions on what you can do with the products you supposedly “bought.” This began with copyright, but has morphed into other areas as well, including abusive and illegal claims about “warranty void if removed.” I still believe that excessive copyright law is to blame for all of this, as physical goods manufacturers looked at the post-sale restrictions enabled by copyright law and immediately began to think of ways to use that on physical items.

This lack of a “right to repair” is showing up in more and more places including, somewhat incredibly, the US military. The NY Times recently ran an op-ed from Capt. Elle Ekman, a logistics officer in the US Marine Corps., expressing her dismay at how the lack of right to repair laws is actually making it difficult to impossible for the US military to repair its own equipment. The whole thing is really stunning.

I first heard about the term from a fellow Marine interested in problems with monopoly power and technology. A few past experiences then snapped into focus. Besides the broken generator in South Korea, I remembered working at a maintenance unit in Okinawa, Japan, watching as engines were packed up and shipped back to contractors in the United States for repairs because ?that?s what the contract says.? The process took months.

With every engine sent back, Marines lost the opportunity to practice the skills they might need one day on the battlefield, where contractor support is inordinately expensive, unreliable or nonexistent.

I also recalled how Marines have the ability to manufacture parts using water-jets, lathes and milling machines (as well as newer 3-D printers), but that these tools often sit idle in maintenance bays alongside broken-down military equipment. Although parts from the manufacturer aren?t available to repair the equipment, we aren?t allowed to make the parts ourselves ?due to specifications.?

Ekman notes that this problem has gotten worse over time, not just because of companies trying to block the right to actually fix what you own, but because of the trend to push R&D out of the military into the commercial sector, and then for the military to purchase from that commercial sector. When the military built its own stuff, of course it could repair it. But now it relies on standard commercial contracts, which apparently are blocking the right to repair and leaving US service men and women with subpar equipment that could (and should) have been fixed much faster. And Ekman expects the problem to only worsen:

The effects of the right-to-repair paradigm will become only more significant and restrictive as older military vehicles and systems are replaced with equipment that is more complex and involving more electronics. Already complicated equipment designs lead to situations where the manufacturer is the only source for repairs.

Again, this is an issue that reaches far and wide, well beyond the claims of “piracy” or “knock-offs” that some people insist is at the heart of the right to repair movement. When the military has to worry about whether or not it can have the best equipment working properly because of a bullshit commercial contract, we have a real problem:

Fundamentally, service members just want to ensure that their gear is ready to meet mission requirements. While a broken generator or tactical vehicle may seem like small issues, the implications are much larger when a combat ship or a fighter jet needs to be fixed. What happens when those systems break somewhere with limited communications or transportation? Will the Department of Defense get stuck in the mud because of a warranty?

It’s well past the time that the right to repair was established as a fundamental right. People who insist on supporting “property rights” are frequently on the wrong side of this argument, by claiming that the “contract right” supersedes the “right to repair.” But that’s ridiculous and truly an attack on actual property rights and ownership. If you own something, you should be able to take it apart, to modify it, and to fix it, without it violating any contracts or laws.

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Comments on “The End Of Ownership, Military Edition: Even The US Military Can't Fix Its Own Equipment Without Right To Repair Laws”

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Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

Isn’t the big question why did/does DoD allow such requirements in their contracts? The way I understand how government procurement works, they go for the lowest bidder, and one way to create a low bid is to have an ongoing revenue flow by requiring all repair be done by the manufacturer. However, that is a rather obvious tactic and as pointed out in the article above has a drastic effect on unit readiness. DoD procurement people should be cognizant of that, and if they aren’t they should be replaced by more competent personnel.

I wonder how big the kickbacks were?

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PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

"This isn’t a right-to-repair issue so much as it is a catastrophic failure in military equipment purchasing."

It’s actually both. On the one hand, the military in theory should be getting better deals than civilians if only due to guaranteed bill payment and bulk purchasing. On the other hand, this issue really should exist for either military or civilian contracts.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

"This isn’t a right-to-repair issue so much as it is a catastrophic failure in military equipment purchasing."

It’s both.

It’s an incredibly shit move by the manufacturer to lend-lease equipment under the fraudulent claim that they’re "selling" it. Acting like this should be considered fraud, at the very least.

And the military needs to dishonorably discharge whatever inept or bribed employee closed a deal which held the entire military hostage to a single supplier. Possibly with a charge of treason thrown in for good measure.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

"So many people do not understand what exactly it takes to meet the requirements of said crime, they think it means a lot of things that are not so."

…You are correct. What best fits the bill under US law would probably be "seditious conspiracy".

Either way there’s an argument to be made for a court-martial with severe consequence when the hamfisted, self-serving or malicious purchase cripples parts of the military.

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Wendy Cockcroft (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

Unfortunately it’d be hard to find a supplier who didn’t commit fraud by pretending that lend/lease/licence = purchase. What we actually need is an expansion of fraud law to cover such blatantly misleading and anti-competitive practices. In a government owned and controlled by corporations, good luck with that.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

"What we actually need is an expansion of fraud law to cover such blatantly misleading and anti-competitive practices. "

What is ironic is that most common consumer laws DO cover this. It’s just that – as illustrated by the John Deere example – copyright overrides many of them. Because THAT is the legislation which is used to circumvent any and all normal provisions of ownership in favor of allowing unrelated third parties to dictate what you may or may not do with what you own.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 It isn't cheaper if you have to pay fore

"John Deere is not a copyright troll."

They were some of the first out of the gate with the idea that no one who purchases John deere machinery should be allowed to repair or modify it in any way…

…so yes, they have become a copyright troll, imho. They "sell" machinery and then turn right around and insist the guy who paid good money for it still doesn’t own what he bought.

The only difference between john Deere and a traditional copyright troll so far is that they aren’t mass-mailing every farmer with a John Deere receipt and asking for reparations on the grounds that MOST of them will at some point have modified the machinery they bought in some way.

I call them a troll because they abuse the same piece of horribly bad legislation the same way traditional copyright trolls do. Just not so far on the same scale.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

Isn’t the big question why did/does DoD allow such requirements in their contracts?

I wonder how big the kickbacks were?

You answered your own question.

Remember: Those constant military budget increases aren’t for paying soldiers and their families, it’s to inflate the profit margins of the industrial complex that supports them.

Of course restrictions on repairs are going to be in the contracts. It’s all for the glory of the shareholders, and why should the politicians care? They aren’t paying for it out of pocket. The politicians just take the money needed to pay for inflated costs from the poor, and you can bet that when push comes to shove, the equipment protecting the politicans and the shareholders will be in perfect working order.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

I do not think you are implying there is no problem, just addressing a specific point.

I would add, the living conditions they are provided is sub standard. There have been attempts to correct the problem but the funding was stolen for some other program. Rinse, repeat. The living conditions may meet the standard for poverty, idk.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 It isn't cheaper if you have to pay forever

The living conditions may meet the standard for poverty, idk.

I don’t think there’s a governmental standard for living conditions, other than being fit for human habitation. So relatively free of harmful pests, chemicals, structural dangers, etc. I hope military housing is well above those standards.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Not really. The military has always been divided into two groups of people. The group that could not give two fucks if protocol was broken and the group that would marry protocol if they could, then live under constant fear of a divorce.

Bruce C. says:

Re: Language

It’s hard to tell from the article or the Op-Ed, but it may be more of a problem with language left out of the contract rather than language put into the contract.

Contract saying "manufacturer will warrant and provide repair service for x years after delivery of each item…" seems reasonable on its face. The issue comes up if there is nothing stating that the DoD can do its own repairs without voiding the warranty. Or if the contract explicitly states that any repairs done outside the warranty process voids the warranty.

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Personanongrata says:

Boondoggles R' US

When the military has to worry about whether or not it can have the best equipment working properly because of a bullshit commercial contract, we have a real problem:

Unfortunately you are approaching this problem from the prospective of a rational person.

These defense contracts are not mistakes they are the system at work.

Military contracts and procurement are anything but rational. The system has nothing to do with defense of the nation and everything to do with generating profit.

The worthless generals/admirals @ the five sided puzzle palace (ie Pentagon) have long ago sold this nation out in search of plumb sinecures sitting on the boards of defense contractors once they retire from feeding to the public trough.

A cursory examination of some recent military boondoggles:

LCS, F35, FCS, SDI, SeaWolfSSN, updating nuclear triad

https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/12/opinion/20100313_Pentagonsboondoggles.html?_r=1

Italicized/bold text was excerpted from thenation.com a report titled:

Exclusive: The Pentagon’s Massive Accounting Fraud Exposed

In all, at least a mind-boggling $21 trillion of Pentagon financial transactions between 1998 and 2015 could not be traced, documented, or explained, concluded Skidmore. To convey the vastness of that sum, $21 trillion is roughly five times more than the entire federal government spends in a year. It is greater than the US Gross National Product, the world’s largest at an estimated $18.8 trillion. And that $21 trillion includes only plugs that were disclosed in reports by the Office of Inspector General, which does not review all of the Pentagon’s spending.

https://www.thenation.com/article/pentagon-audit-budget-fraud/

Its not as if the nation is suffering from failing infrastructure, record homelessness, exponentially growing debt/deficits or lack of access for tens of millions of people to preventive medical care (amongst a myriad of other issues)

Nope nothing to see here.

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Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Boondoggles R' US

"The worthless generals/admirals @ the five sided puzzle palace (ie Pentagon) have long ago sold this nation out in search of plumb sinecures sitting on the boards of defense contractors once they retire from feeding to the public trough."

That almost sounds like the tired old chestnut of the "military-industrial complex". Surely only frothing marxist pinko commies like Dwight Eisenhower could ever believe such claptrap. /s

But yes, it’s been speculated that large sectors of US industry today are essentially subsidized to 100% exclusively through supplying the large US war machine…and that this is one reason why even in times of peace the US budgets its military to a ridiculous level of its GDP. Because if the military ever suffers actual cutback in materials purchase the US economy will tank.

The official budget of US military spending in 2018 was some 650 billion USD. That’s about 40% of the military expenditure of every country in the world, aggregated.

Still, it’s one thing to overspend. Another to pork barrel your way through the military budget.

The bigger issue here, though, is that in this particular case you now have material which should it break in combat is illegal for the military to repair. There’s an argument here that closing a deal like this should invoke a treason clause. I’m not sure Hanlon’s Razor is sharp enough to carve a better answer out of the OP.

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Wyrm (profile) says:

Re: Re: Boondoggles R' US

The bigger issue here, though, is that in this particular case you now have material which should it break in combat is illegal for the military to repair.

Note that the article explains that it goes beyond just the illegality of it.
There would likely be an argument of force majeure to be made in court if your hardware breaks in the middle of a war zone and you took necessary steps to repair in order to survive the fight.
However, the problem is wider as the army can’t even train to repair the equipment or to manufacture critical pieces on site. So even if you can have the court waive the charge of "someone made an illegal field repair to save his life and possibly the interests of his country", you might not have anyone with the skills to make the repair in the first place.
So the situation is way more critical than that.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Boondoggles R' US

"…the problem is wider as the army can’t even train to repair the equipment or to manufacture critical pieces on site."

I missed that part of it, but you’re right.

Most military, when it comes to materiel, have historically operated according under the creed that "it’s not a weapon until every soldier known how to operate and fix it in the field".
Based on basically every nasty surprise suffered by battlefield malfunctions, ever, in human history.

Now you have an entire section of gear which is likely to be completely outside the field of expertise of any mechanic or engineer likely to be serving in the field. In this case it was…engines. Nothing important, i’m sure, if artillery, tanks, cranes, ammunition trucks and lifts…stops working and the mechanic spends his time in the field holding a phone and listening to whatever muzak the responsible company likes to torment its customer base with while hearing a sadistic computer-generated voice cheerfully chirping that "…please hold, you are….number 268 in the queue…".

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Boondoggles R' US

"I remember Rumsfeld getting up behind a podium of microphones and saying, "$2.2 Billion dollars is missing and we don’t know what happened to it.""

Rumsfeld is a bad example. He could have claimed his ASS was missing and everyone would just think it was rummy being rummy.

Now if someone with actual competence had made the same statement about 2.2 billion dollars, it would be a no-so-shocking indication of a fundamental flaw in the military, not just that an inept armchair neo-con general was proving as bad at economy as he was at just about everything else.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Boondoggles R' US

"Didn’t Donald Rumsfeld sell Iraq a SHITLOAD OF ANTHRAX to use against Iran? That qualifies him as horrible in my book."

He did. And the chemicals Iraq used against the Kurds.

Way back when Saddam was the best US ally in the region and rumsfeld was his primary contact in the US.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Boondoggles R' US

"I think he was a US customer not a US ally."

No, he was, in fact, considered the greatest of the US allies, especially right after Iran ended up with Khomeini in charge. Saddam didn’t think twice about "containing" the iranian threat. Despite plenty of cautionary US intelligence warnings that Saddam was an out-of-control psychopath the political establishment loved him, especially the republican side…although both sides of the aisle should be held responsible for hand-waving off every early warning.

As a bit of trivia, Saddam hussein was given the keys to the city by the mayor of detroit.

He had to work hard and go the distance before the US started distancing itself from him.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Boondoggles R' US

" Rumsfeld wasn’t horrible. There were significant public relations and intelligence failures during his tenure though. I don’t think torture helped with anything either."

Quite a lot of active generals termed him, when they were polite, an "arm-chair commander without strategic competence".

Less polite versions include battlefield generals uttering a LOT of [redacted]’s.

So yes, he was horrible. That he is less maliciously inept than many we’ve come to know under both GWB and Trump is not an excuse for whatabouting old rummy.

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Federico (profile) says:

You have it backwards

Capt. Elle Ekman is hopelessly confused: they seem to think that the military has some intrinsic right to do whatever it is doing.

The defense budget was created only to distribute federal money to the private corporations, not to make some officer happy. If the corporations couldn’t profit off the military, Congress would eliminate the army the very next day, and Capt. Elle Ekman would be unemployed.

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tom (profile) says:

Another aspect of the problem is it is often far easier to go through the long irritating approval process once for a long term combination supply and repair contract then to get a separate contract for supply and many smaller contracts for repair parts, where each contract requires the same long irritating process.

A lot of this is the result of past criminal purchasing conduct where Congress felt it "Had to do Something". Rinse and repeat enough times and the procurement process becomes the convoluted process we have today where the end user has to fight the system as much they do any enemy.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: military bureaucracy

yeah, U.S. military procurement is notorious for imposing massive, complex contract speciifications on vendors … and could easily add "right to repair" in any & all contracts — but the military cuts corners when in a hurry.

And the Military is often unable to repair its many sophisticated systems … even with a "right to repair".
It’s very difficult to get/train military maintenance technicians for new complex systems — thus it’s very common for vendors to deploy their own employee techs with fielded systems (at huge extra cost to the U.S. Military).

Anonymous Coward says:

The atea to look at is the government and members of it and opposition politicians! If (and i know it’s a massive if) there wasn’t ad much corruption and self serving or the willingness to help the entertainment industries, where this crap started, the situation would never have evolved to the complete disaster it is now! How any judge, any court could possibly remove from people what they had bought snd change it to become, basically, that they only purcjased a licence and the tight yo use it is totally beyond me! The judges involved in instigating this need stringing up by the balls! Then they need investigating to see what they received, because there’s no way they did it for nothing!

Dave P. says:

Hands tied?

I thought the military in most countries had specialised engineer regiments to cater for mechanical engineering projects and repairs, etc. Does this mean that where this "right to repair" is a no-no, they are powerless to effect repairs, when spare parts are required to get things up and running again? If stationed abroad, do they still have to ship things back to the manufacturer? The situation sounds totally ludicrous to me.

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Anonymous Coward says:

So, as someone who has and continues to supply hardware and software to the DoD.

  • The process is overall, pretty broken. Contractors and DoD are both to blame
  • Generally, fee for development projects (profit) is in the 8%-12% range. That’s not very interesting profit margin, so companies have often worked to bulk up the long tail with support contracts and the like (that include those clauses up above)
  • Contractors are better at sliding things into contracts than DoD is to finding them
  • DoD suffers from a lack of contracting personnel, and uniformed leaders rotate out ever 2-3 years, resulting in a lot of inexperienced leaders, each of them attempting to make their mark and check their box toward their own advancement. Like any executive, these folks often override their experienced civilian workforce, with the same mixed results
  • Recently, the pendulum, especially for software, is swinging heavily toward Open Standards/Open Interfaces, or in some cases, government data rights on developed software. They are tired of software lock-in. However, this does change or completely remove the incentive for commercial companies to innovate on their own.
  • DoD work requires substantially more effort. A machine shop, for example, must comply with various IT security and sourcing guidelines to make parts. The IT security stuff is intrusive and hard to comply with, and it’s a moving target.
  • Equipment purchased by the DoD is often expected to last for decades. This is completely different than the commercial space. For critical projects, 30 years of electronic parts are purchased at once to ensure supply.
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GHB (profile) says:

John Deere INTENSIFIES

When companies abuse copyright law:
-Sony BMG and FlightSimLabs thought its a good idea to go vigilante over their DRM to spy on users.
-John Deere trying to monopolize repairs by exploiting how contract EULA laws work.

It’s now getting obvious that now copyright law is now anti-user.

Michael Grimes says:

You have it wrong

Almost everything the military buys contains MILSPEC parts. This is a government requirement. Replacing a MILSPEC part with a non MILSPEC part is not only illegal, but you could be punished under the USCMJ. MILSPEC parts are guaranteed to meet required specifications for the end item to operate safe and effectively. Often, close tolerances, strength or materials are specified. It has nothing to do with the right to repair. An item is predetermined as to what level of maintenance it requires, and this is broken down part by part. Some things a unit can repair, others a military depot, and lastly a contractor facility. Having served in the military as an officer for over 20 years, and later as a high ranking Civil Servant, I am well versed in military contract requirements. The article is very mistaken as written.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: You have it wrong

Some things a unit can repair, others a military depot, and lastly a contractor facility.

OK, but why? Are you saying the contracts have nothing to do with why a part has to be shipped to the contractor for repair? And Ekman is what? Remembering it wrong? Hallucinating? Lying?

I remembered working at a maintenance unit in Okinawa, Japan, watching as engines were packed up and shipped back to contractors in the United States for repairs because “that’s what the contract says.” The process took months…

I also recalled how Marines have the ability to manufacture parts using water-jets, lathes and milling machines (as well as newer 3-D printers), but that these tools often sit idle in maintenance bays alongside broken-down military equipment. Although parts from the manufacturer aren’t available to repair the equipment, we aren’t allowed to make the parts ourselves “due to specifications.”

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nasch (profile) says:

Re: You have it wrong

Having served in the military as an officer for over 20 years, and later as a high ranking Civil Servant, I am well versed in military contract requirements.

Forgot to mention – the officer in question is a logistics officer, so this topic is right in her wheelhouse. I would tend to believe her over a random officer in some other field.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: You have it wrong

What leads you to believe that one associated with USMC logistics is well versed in the procurement process spanning R&D to Production and subsequent Product Support?

The individual at 40 makes very good points. The op-ed author does make observations that are not necessarily incorrect, but clearly she was not around in the early 90s or so when numerous policies and procedures came to the fore within the DoD concerning the perceived need to secure participation in the procurement process by commercial companies not generally associated with the defense industry. Had she been she would appreciate that the source of her frustration resides with DoD policies and has nothing to do with the right-to-repair discussion making the rounds in other contexts.

Michael Grimes says:

Re: Re: You have it wrong

I was a Logistics Officer. not some random officer. I was highly certified in Acquisition Logistics and Contracting.

It is the military, not some contractor, who repairs what and at what level the maintenance is done. There are some components that are even more strictly controlled that are MILSPEC, and that would be the SUBSAFE components. It is the military that determines what has to be MILSPEC and the sources for procuring the parts. The initial contract does specify the source, but there are sub contractors involved also. It depends what it is and what needs to be done.

It is the military that decides all aspects of procurement. They write the contract. If the end user is unhappy, they know who their contracting officer is. Contracts can be modded, alternate sources procured and so for. But, the military or anyone else, is not allowed to self manufacture by any means a MILSPEC part. I would say that in most cases, the self manufactured part would fail specification and ultimately result in failure of whatever it was put in.

The fallacy is that it is the contractor who determines if you can fix the part at your level or not. That is not the case. The military supply system is set up so that each and every part is identified as to what level of repair can be done. Contractors have nothing to say about it.

The article is so full of bull, it is incredible. I was also prior enlisted, so yes, there was stuff that was broke that I knew I could fix and was not allowed to. That is because the technical order manual for the item described who had to fix it and it was above our rated level of repair. Contractors not allowing you to fix something is only valid if there was a maintenance contract with the contractor. Then that becomes a different issue altogether. Once again, units know who their contracting officer is and also the contracting officer representative (COR). I have been a COR many times. It is the way the MILITARY has set things up.

The article is not accurate and it is misleading.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: You have it wrong

Contractors not allowing you to fix something is only valid if there was a maintenance contract with the contractor… It is the way the MILITARY has set things up.

I thought that was the point. These contracts are set up in a way that doesn’t permit the military to do their own repairs. That’s how the military has set things up. I don’t see what you’re actually contradicting.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 You have it wrong

I am nearly 100% sure the contracts aren’t the problem. This appears to possibly be written from the standpoint of someone who didn’t read/right the contracts, doesn’t know what the law allows with or without the contracts, or thinks his orders are from the contractors not his chain of command.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: You have it wrong

You better believe if a part on a battlefield breaks, no one in their right mind would be thumbing through a stack of receipts to see if some corporation is going to cause trouble if some person tasked to getting whatever it is back online to serve the men and women up front fixes it theirself. When they were finished killing the enemy, I believe they would be justified to turn their weaponry around.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: You have it wrong

Also, nobody in the military can be charged with felony violations of the DMCA becuase it is not being done for financial gain.

What people don’t understand is that the felony DMCA provisions only apply, if you are doing it for the purpose of making money.

That is why, for example, someone who uses one of the many "cracks" to bypass Windows activation to use Windows in the own home, for their own personal use, is not committing a felony, becuase it is for their own personal use, and not for "financial gain".

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: You have it wrong

To have a valid contract, you have to have a meeting of the minds. I can reasonably understand how a 45 page EULA for windows10 might not be possibly understood by 99% of purchasers or end users. Those ties that attempt to bind are not available on the outside of the box anyway. Do you really think most users read that bunk from microsoft?

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: You have it wrong

Erm, others might be able to correct me, but I definitely think you have that wrong. Otherwise, wouldn’t it be technically legal to set up a site to torrent movies so long as you don’t have any ads to generate income?

The reason it’s generally more of a crime to provide a cracking tool than it is to use it is because a) the DMCA specifies the distribution of the tool, not its usage, as being prohibited and b) there are numerous legal reasons for using such a tool without committing another crime. Which is why security researchers and the like always have problems with the DMCA – it’s technically legal for them to do certain things but illegal to share the tools required to do it.

John Lloyd Scharf (profile) says:

...I first heard about the term from a fellow Marine ....

????????????, ????????????, ????????????????, ????????????????, ????️????????????, ????????????????????, ????????????????????????????????, ????????????????????????????????, ????????????????????????????????????, ????????????????????????????????????, 【????????????????????????????????】, ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????, ???????????? ???????????????????????????? ????????????????????, ???????????? ???????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????, and ???????????? ???????????? ???????????????? ???????????????????? ARE FAKE NEWS FOR CONSUMPTION BY????️: #DeviousDeviantDemocrats #MarginalizedSocialistMedia, #CorruptCoerciveCollectivists, #PettyPoliticisedPolice #PretentiousPovertyPimps, #MockMacysMarxists, #LatteLimousineLeftists and #SuperciliousSuperficialCelebrities.
Why do you regurgitate their gossip?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: #DimbFuckStormTrumpers

I love how you brain dead numptys go to all the bother to create a profile to post your brain drool because you are too fucking stupid to post anonymously.

Also by the way bro, it’s obvious that changing fonts is a skill so far beyond you as to indistinguishable from magic. So you probably should credit the shitposter you copy pasted it from.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: ...I first heard about the term from a fellow Marine ....

Which term? You put so much effort into formatting your comment (in a way that won’t parse in the email notifications that will let people see new comments on a quiet thread), that you forgot to mention the term you’re so butthurt about.

Also, fun fact – hashtags won’t work on this site, so you’ve actually wasted almost every single word you typed. Impressive.

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