Automakers are petitioning the Library of Congress prevent backyard mechanics from repairing their own cars:
Automakers are supporting provisions in copyright law that could prohibit home mechanics and car enthusiasts from repairing and modifying their own vehicles.
In comments filed with a federal agency that will determine whether tinkering with a car constitutes a copyright violation, OEMs and their main lobbying organization say cars have become too complex and dangerous for consumers and third parties to handle.
Allowing them to continue to fix their cars has become “legally problematic,” according to a written statement from the Auto Alliance, the main lobbying arm of automakers.
The dispute arises from a section of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that no one thought could apply to vehicles when it was signed into law in 1998. But now, in an era where cars are rolling computing platforms, the U.S. Copyright Office is examining whether provisions of the law that protect intellectual property should prohibit people from modifying and tuning their cars.
Every three years, the office holds hearings on whether certain activities should be exempt from the DMCA’s section 1201, which governs technological measures that protect copyrighted work. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit organization that advocates for individual rights in the digital world, has asked the office to ensure that enthusiasts can continue working on cars by providing exemptions that would give them the right to access necessary car components.
This is under the anti-counterfeiting provisions of the DMCA, which not only prevents copying, it prevents “unauthorized access”, and the auto industry is attempting to lock down their cars to the backyard mechanic, and possibly the independent mechanics as well.
Do you want to have no alternative to price gouging by the dealer on maintenance?
Basically, patent terms are short and copyright terms are long, so look for ways to abuse copyright law to do what a patent does.