Wouldn't you agree in principal that companies are stretching a law with good original intentions into a way to force consumers to become dependent on said company for the life of ownership? Look at epson, HP and Roland with service lockout. It's a historical issue that the government is always behind the curve on. OBD2 standards on vehicles is one example of a rule made to protect consumers after auto makers developed proprietary interfaces for auto diagnosis. It was out of hand and it continues on. Look at our printers now. The EU is way ahead of the USA in this arena, they don't allow this stuff.
Oh absolutely. And they still get extensions on protections that they shouldn't get. Although, to be honest, it appears different for me, if there is an IP still within a smaller company or family versus a faceless corporation. Not really a valid reason, just something seems different to me on that level. Of course, I do have IP out there as well, so I can go either way on some applications.
The EU has some better things (a lot of stuff I don't agree with), when it comes to some things in tech. I doubt that it will come here or if it does, it'll be watered down to not have any teeth. Part of the reason that ours is behind the curve, look at the makeup of congress, some of them started when MS still had a Unix like OS (and I remember those days).
are you saying that a sign shop would charge more for a Harley Davidson decal than a generic decal?
I wouldn't know if they would or not. That would be speculation on my part. But it doesn't matter if they would sell it for more or not. It's still up to the owner to have or not have something on the market. They own the property after all. At least how things are now. Doesn't matter if it's just one or a thousand, if the person that you are doing it for is reselling them or not.
Adding in another scary layer, so many Private Equity companies are now involved in these chains of ownership. Private Equity companies will jump on any opportunity to sue the hell out of someone for an easy pay day.
Oh yea and you have some of those firms that buy up older companies to suck blood from a stone and you have the ones that buy up newer companies as well.