Fucking GROSS.

So because »gestures at this timeline«, the first appliance from Cory Doctorow's ( @pluralistic ) "Unauthorized Bread" is now on the market. A 'smart oven' you buy and subscribe to the company's meals, which bear a QR code you scan so the oven, amidst its ongoing datastream to the mothership, 'knows' how to cook it. The company, which I will not name (and you please won't either), claim you can use the oven to cook your own food, too. But you have to have their app and a wifi connection to set it up and to operate most of its controls, which means at any moment the company can go "lolnope" or put controls (or the ability to cook unauthorized food) behind a paywall, or brick the thing deliberately, or sell your food logs, or do any of the other things Doctorow described better than I, which is why I've linked the story here.

https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2020/01/unauthorized-bread-a-near-future-tale-of-refugees-and-sinister-iot-appliances/

Unauthorized Bread: Real rebellions involve jailbreaking IoT toasters

Cory Doctorow's book, Radicalized, is up for a CBC award. To celebrate, here's an excerpt.

Ars Technica

@isocat

Like HP who've locked their printers to their own ink.

@pluralistic

@monkeyben @isocat @pluralistic it's even worse. If your payment method expires you aren't allowed to use the perfectly good ink already in the printer that you already paid for via the subscription service.

@DragonBard @pluralistic @monkeyben @isocat

BTW... I'm thinking of buying a laser printer. Is there some brand that works well in Linux, and I can use whatever ink i want?

Some years ago I always used HP , but now they have that ink slavery contract. Don't know how other brands behave

@hirunatan
Word on the wire is Epson (for ink, especially the EcoTank series) and Brother (for compatibility), but I haven't tested personally.

@DragonBard @pluralistic @monkeyben @isocat

@dzwiedziu @hirunatan @DragonBard @pluralistic @monkeyben @isocat I second Brother laser.
They used to be entirely non predatory, I heard they're now slowly following their competitors tactics but their current range is still mostly useable compared to "ransom printing" from HP, Canon, Epson & the like.