So there are times that I will find connections where there are not any, I think this might be one of those times but I wanted to ask. I will not go into the history as that has been covered extensively here, reddit, wikipedia, and all over the web but the Gardner brothers lawsuits that nearly killed the paintball industry remind me of the current lawsuit tactics of future motion / the one wheel and other anti right to repair tactics that are an ongoing issue in that realm of technology.
Disclaimer: I am not a right to repair expert i just watch Louis Rossmann a little, an expert of the history of future motion, the one wheel or anything else please check the facts for yourself. If you know more about this please share so I can learn and others can as well.
For those not aware there is a company called future motion, there were some small communities that developed an electric skateboard with a single wheel that you can balance on and is self propelled. Future Motion, took the idea and patented it, and started to develop it into a product. When it first came out they allowed upgrades to the board but sued anyone making anything close. Recently they have locked the board down to the point that it is impossible to work on and must be sent back to future motion to do any work, think if smart parts made it so their markers had rechargeable batteries and if the battery was removed at all you were forced to send the marker to smart parts, no local tech, no outside expert, no one can work on them. The other thing they are doing is suing anyone that makes anything for their device, most recently they sued a guy who developed a better battery management system.
That last part about suing anyone who makes anything for their device reminds me of how smart parts and a lot of the bigger companies killed the aftermarket parts industry that was a large portion of paintball in my opinion. I understand that is not the whole story as a major killer was not the lawsuits but the fact that markers got good enough that you did not need aftermarket parts as much, if at all.
With all of that said i see that happening still today and it seems like the paintball industry is starting to follow the thought process of making things impossible to repair, I hate to point fingers but it seems like Dye started it and Luxe and the others are taking it on. Look at the amount of orings and some of them proprietary that are in a typical new marker. Try and find a guide with oring sizes and durometer for a new marker. Granted i think that the paintball industry has stagnated and the only reason to buy anything new is the features and the colors. That however is a story for a different day.
To Long Did not Read : Future motion is starting to sue people like smart parts did for making one wheel parts and there seems to be an anti repair mentality going around.
What my question if there is one is am i seeing something that is not there, did the Gardner brother start the anti right to repair trend and now everything else it taking their lead, or was it just that paintball got hit early by this trend? Is anti right to repair a norm in the paintball industry already and getting worse?
Disclaimer: I am not a right to repair expert i just watch Louis Rossmann a little, an expert of the history of future motion, the one wheel or anything else please check the facts for yourself. If you know more about this please share so I can learn and others can as well.
For those not aware there is a company called future motion, there were some small communities that developed an electric skateboard with a single wheel that you can balance on and is self propelled. Future Motion, took the idea and patented it, and started to develop it into a product. When it first came out they allowed upgrades to the board but sued anyone making anything close. Recently they have locked the board down to the point that it is impossible to work on and must be sent back to future motion to do any work, think if smart parts made it so their markers had rechargeable batteries and if the battery was removed at all you were forced to send the marker to smart parts, no local tech, no outside expert, no one can work on them. The other thing they are doing is suing anyone that makes anything for their device, most recently they sued a guy who developed a better battery management system.
That last part about suing anyone who makes anything for their device reminds me of how smart parts and a lot of the bigger companies killed the aftermarket parts industry that was a large portion of paintball in my opinion. I understand that is not the whole story as a major killer was not the lawsuits but the fact that markers got good enough that you did not need aftermarket parts as much, if at all.
With all of that said i see that happening still today and it seems like the paintball industry is starting to follow the thought process of making things impossible to repair, I hate to point fingers but it seems like Dye started it and Luxe and the others are taking it on. Look at the amount of orings and some of them proprietary that are in a typical new marker. Try and find a guide with oring sizes and durometer for a new marker. Granted i think that the paintball industry has stagnated and the only reason to buy anything new is the features and the colors. That however is a story for a different day.
To Long Did not Read : Future motion is starting to sue people like smart parts did for making one wheel parts and there seems to be an anti repair mentality going around.
What my question if there is one is am i seeing something that is not there, did the Gardner brother start the anti right to repair trend and now everything else it taking their lead, or was it just that paintball got hit early by this trend? Is anti right to repair a norm in the paintball industry already and getting worse?
Comment