Sorry Jon, you don't own your tractor.
IT’S OFFICIAL: JOHN Deere and General Motors want to eviscerate the notion of ownership. Sure, we pay for their vehicles. But we don’t own them. Not according to their corporate lawyers, anyway.
In a particularly spectacular display of corporate delusion, John Deere—the world’s largest agricultural machinery maker —told the Copyright Office that farmers don’t own their tractors. Because computer code snakes through the DNA of modern tractors, farmers receive “an implied license for the life of the vehicle to operate the vehicle.”
It’s John Deere’s tractor, folks. You’re just driving it.
Several manufacturers recently submitted similar comments to the Copyright Office under an inquiry into the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. DMCA is a vast 1998 copyright law that (among other things) governs the blurry line between software and hardware. The Copyright Office, after reading the comments and holding a hearing, will decide in July which high-tech devices we can modify, hack, and repair—and decide whether John Deere’s twisted vision of ownership will become a reality.
Over the last two decades, manufacturers have used the DMCA to argue that consumers do not own the software underpinning the products they buy—things like smartphones, computers, coffeemakers, cars, and, yes, even tractors. So, Old MacDonald has a tractor, but he owns a massive barn ornament, because the manufacturer holds the rights to the programming that makes it run.
pork, how much you think I can get for my mower deck? A friend and I were talking the other day and he suggested because of the way our yard is laid out selling the deck and getting a pull behind which is cheaper and I can use the extra money for more implements or other projects. Like a bucket expander for snow removal
5 Mar ’12
Is yours 54" or 60"?
I would be cautious on selling the deck because tractors w/o decks are worth less. I would give it a shot with a first mow with the deck and see how you like it.
What were the reasons for going with the pull-behind? I usually hear they are better/easier at larger and more open spaces but not as good in tight areas.
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