Business US farmers win right to repair John Deere tractors - Right to repair

Tractor maker John Deere has agreed to give its US customers the right to fix their own equipment.

Previously, farmers were only allowed to use authorised parts and service facilities rather than cheaper independent repair options.

Deere and Co. is one of the world's largest makers farming equipment.

Consumer groups have for years been calling on companies to allow their customers to be able to fix everything from smartphones to tractors.

The American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) and Deere & Co. signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on Sunday.

"It addresses a long-running issue for farmers and ranchers when it comes to accessing tools, information and resources, while protecting John Deere's intellectual property rights and ensuring equipment safety," AFBF President Zippy Duvall said.

Under the agreement, equipment owners and independent technicians will not be allowed to "divulge trade secrets" or "override safety features or emissions controls or to adjust Agricultural Equipment power levels."

The firm looks forward to working with the AFBF and "our customers in the months and years ahead to ensure farmers continue to have the tools and resources to diagnose, maintain and repair their equipment," Dave Gilmore, a senior vice president at Deere & Co. said.

Farmers are part of a grassroots right-to-repair movement that has been putting pressure on manufacturers to allow customers and independent repair shops to fix their devices.

In 2022, Apple launched a "self-service repair" scheme giving customers the ability to replace their own batteries, screens and cameras of recent iPhones.

The UK and European Union have policies enforcing manufacturers to make spare parts available to customers and independent companies for some electronics.

"Consumers have long been complaining that products not only tend to break down faster than they used to, but that repairing them is often too costly, difficult to arrange for lack of spare parts, and sometimes impossible," according to the European Parliamentary Research Service.

Some US states like New York and Massachusetts and have passed similar measures. President Biden signed an executive order in 2021 calling on the Federal Trade Commission to draw up a countrywide policy allowing customers to repair their own products, particularly in the technology and agriculture sectors.

 
Very good news. For the farmbros in my circle, they want to be able to fix things in a timely manner without waiting for dealer repairmen- the windows for planting and harvesting are narrow where I am due to climate; when the repair guy just doesn’t work weekends and it’s 4 days in spring of no planting- it can make or break a whole season.

My hacker mechanic friend is also excited but more in a Dr Frankenstein way.

Yeah your harvest output is being calculated in real time and sent… somewhere.
 
This sounds positive on the surface, but the devil is in the detail. Much like the RTR law that was recently passed in New York state, which is basically worthless yet can be sold to normies as a victory for consumer rights i.e. it excludes a whole bunch of stuff like farm machinery and medical devices plus it only forces manufacturers to sell spare parts as a whole unit (e.g. a motherboard) rather than as individual components (e.g. individual chips).


I'll reserve my opinion about this news until Louis Rossmann explains the implications if it's all the same.
 
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Imagine being so fucking stupid that you consciously buy these products knowing they're designed to milk you.
Yeah your harvest output is being calculated in real time and sent… somewhere.
You'd think that the typical farmer would be too wise to get themselves stitched up by globohomo, but here we are.
 
Yeah your harvest output is being calculated in real time and sent… somewhere.
how else is the government supposed to know about how much you are planting not selling stuff on the side?

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You'd think that the typical farmer would be too wise to get themselves stitched up by globohomo, but here we are.
I am pretty sure people got into the trap before anyone was talking about the trap.

Unless you have some old tractor and have the ability to fix it/machine parts to fix it you are at the mercy of the market and financing.
 
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Imagine being so fucking stupid that you consciously buy these products knowing they're designed to milk you.
I don’t understand it this conversation drives me crazy if it bothers you that much there is practically always another option if you aren’t willing to pay the cost of those other options then the “right” to repair isn’t really that important to you. It’s especially surprising that conservatives support this it’s essentially the government telling businesses how to make their products and it’s not something that makes them safer or could kill people it’s purely for convenience this is something conservatives should be against and is how we give three letter agencies more power
 
Under the agreement, equipment owners and independent technicians will not be allowed to "divulge trade secrets" or "override safety features or emissions controls or to adjust Agricultural Equipment power levels."

What the fuck is this? They're not providing replacement parts? No downloadable software? The fuck this mean? You just sign an NDA, agree to not turn your tractor into a race car, and you get free access to...what?

The Farm Bureau's memorandum of understanding with Deere "will ensure farmers everywhere are able to repair our own equipment," Farm Bureau president Zippy Duvall said, speaking at the federation's convention in Puerto Rico.

"This will enable you and your independent mechanics to identify and fix problems," he said. "You will have access to the diagnostic tools and information you need. And you'll get it at a fair and reasonable price."



So basically all they did is come to an agreement to allow any schmo to say "I have this product, it is broken, I have signed your gay NDA, I want this part" and they get it from official parts distributors, but it's never mentioned what John Deere will do if you use unofficial parts. For instance, Apple will disable or knowingly break features in recent iphones when you use third party parts.

Right to repair simply is not won until the people are completely free to repair their stuff and sourcing parts from anywhere they like. This is a big milestone, but the fight is not yet won. If Louis Rossman stops being a Jordan Peterson wannabe faggot for one second, maybe he'd give further intel.
 
When companies are actively this anti consumer is when I wish for the Chinese to make cheaper and user repairable clones and not of questionable quality.
 
When companies are actively this anti consumer is when I wish for the Chinese to make cheaper and user repairable clones and not of questionable quality.
Indian made Mahindra tractors are popular for the Deere reason. Unfortunately they don't make big ass bitches that can tow a six plow. And those big bitches are what Corp agro uses when they're plowing a couple thousand acres (or harvesting). New Holland and Massey Furgeson produce some big horsepower bitches, too. But they are made in France and Belgium (I believe). Deere has always been the American made choice. Or International Harvester, which really makes equipment, not tractors.

Used to love running the big ol' Oliver diesel around the dairy farm, spreading manure or harvesting corn silage to feed the moos.
 
Indian made Mahindra tractors are popular for the Deere reason. Unfortunately they don't make big ass bitches that can tow a six plow. And those big bitches are what Corp agro uses when they're plowing a couple thousand acres (or harvesting). New Holland and Massey Furgeson produce some big horsepower bitches, too. But they are made in France and Belgium (I believe). Deere has always been the American made choice. Or International Harvester, which really makes equipment, not tractors.

Used to love running the big ol' Oliver diesel around the dairy farm, spreading manure or harvesting corn silage to feed the moos.
That reminded me of another Indian farm equipment brand, Josh. They even have a couple bollywood style music videos. I don't think they make large stuff either like Deere and the Euro brands.

 
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