I was actually quite surprised when I saw that I could connect my car to HA and that the integration was fully featured, with a lot of stats and entities exposed.
I didn’t have time to make much use of it, but I’m still quite sad to see it go. It was nice to be able to glance at the current range, tire pressure, and overall status right from home.
The same stats will be available in the application but, with this gone, we are again, an internet that is even more closed and fenced.
devn0ll · 1h ago
As the product offering has changed after purchase. Would this not be grounds for returning the product for a full refund?
sniffers · 1h ago
No? Can you return your pixel phone because some Gmail feature changed?
zettabomb · 1h ago
This comparison is invalid. Gmail is a separate product from the phone, and importantly, not advertised as being included with the phone. BMW owners are paying separately for the API access, which has now been limited after the sale.
42lux · 45m ago
You accept a license agreement and terms and conditions when you buy the car which lets them pretty much do anything they want with the software. Do you think these company are run by a bunch of 12 year olds and not their legal departments. How can you be so pedantic but at the same time so naive?
Edit: I don't like it either.
zettabomb · 28m ago
>You accept a license agreement when you buy the car which lets them pretty much do anything they want with the software.
This cannot override your rights as a consumer. If I sell you a service, I'm required to provide you that service as agreed upon at time of purchase for the duration of the contract.
>How can you be so pedantic but at the same time so naive?
This is hardly pedantic.
hellotheretoday · 17m ago
Well it kind of can. see all the other companies who have done exactly this with no repercussion: Mazda, Chevrolet, Chamberlain, etc. See companies like Eufy and Philips that sell products advertised working within a local intranet only and then change their mind after the fact (in Philips case over a decade after, when some users had invested hundreds or even thousands into the hue ecosystem).
There appears to be no regulation protecting consumers from this abusive behavior. If it does exist it is not enforced whatsoever.
supermatt · 6m ago
What repercussions are you expecting?
Philips is the perfect example, as I managed to get all my Hue equipment refunded to around 80% of the purchase price 2 years after the purchase.
They refused so I initiated a small claim, which they lost because they breached consumer law.
It’s not rocket science. The problem is that many consumers aren’t aware of their rights, so do nothing about it.
42lux · 3m ago
>> It’s not rocket science. The problem is that many consumers aren’t aware of their rights, so do nothing about it.
Show the ruling because I bet they just didn't turn up. Stop with the anecdotes and bring something tangible.
zettabomb · 7m ago
In no cases can any contract overrule the law. However, you are correct that the law is not being enforced, because it is exceedingly difficult for an individual person to tackle a massive company like BMW. The point of Rossmann's video, if I understand it correctly, is that we shouldn't just keep letting them get away with it, and actually defend our rights.
42lux · 26m ago
>> Why should a car be different in regards to software than your washing machine, tv or iPhone?
zettabomb · 13m ago
It shouldn't be different. It's also illegal to not fulfill the contract as agreed upon in those cases, so I'm not sure what you're trying to say. And the product in question is not the car, the API access is provided as a separate subscription service.
42lux · 9m ago
If it's a seperate t&c and license agreement for the api it's even easier for them to disable services. You are making these statement with so much confidence but the real world works the opposite. Apple throttles iPhones, Google kills services pair of free. Samsung pushes ads on their smarttvos. I think their lawyers are right and you misunderstand the law you are citing otherwise the world would be a better place :)
I don't like it either but it is what it is.
supermatt · 31m ago
> How can you be so pedantic but at the same time so naive?
Wow, insulting others when you clearly have no clue what you are talking about.
In the EU a license agreement cant override your consumer rights. If the car was marketed as having a cardata feature and now that feature is restricted, under EU law you are entitled for it to be restored or fairly compensated - which could mean returning the car if it was a marketed feature and a major factor in the purchasing decision - although it’s more likely to be a monetary compensation for minor features. There’s even specific guidance for “digital elements” of products to cover things exactly like this.
I haven’t returned a car, but I have either returned or requested compensation for other consumer items for similar reasons - and was compensated fairly given their use.
42lux · 29m ago
Go and sue them we will wait with anticipation for the ruling. Last sentence from my first comment stands and could be applied to you as well. Just had a look at their Terms and Conditions and they are pretty clear.
>> Why should a car be different in regards to software than your washing machine, tv or iPhone?
stavros · 18m ago
Again, terms and conditions can't override consumer rights.
The car shouldn't be different from the washing machine, the TV, and the iPhone. I should get a refund if functionality is removed from any of them after purchase.
42lux · 13m ago
It's done everyday by thousands of companies and I've never seen a ruling in the EU or otherwise. Apple still throttles iPhones, Google still kills services paid or free. Samsung pushes ads into their smartTVs... Everyone in this thread makes these comments with full confidence but the real world reflects the opposite.
supermatt · 9m ago
You are so very wrong. Why don’t you just go read some EU consumer guidance to educate yourself.
42lux · 3m ago
God is in his heaven, all is right with the world.
lan321 · 38m ago
The question is whether that should be allowed as products become more and more software based. Should software be treated (more) like hardware?
42lux · 33m ago
Why should a car be different in regards to software than your washing machine, tv or iPhone?
ragebol · 1h ago
No. But maybe you should. The thing got less useful, thus less valuable.
mft_ · 1h ago
…only to be rebranded and reintroduced in a few months for a modest monthly subscription? /s
I didn’t have time to make much use of it, but I’m still quite sad to see it go. It was nice to be able to glance at the current range, tire pressure, and overall status right from home.
The same stats will be available in the application but, with this gone, we are again, an internet that is even more closed and fenced.
Edit: I don't like it either.
This cannot override your rights as a consumer. If I sell you a service, I'm required to provide you that service as agreed upon at time of purchase for the duration of the contract.
>How can you be so pedantic but at the same time so naive?
This is hardly pedantic.
There appears to be no regulation protecting consumers from this abusive behavior. If it does exist it is not enforced whatsoever.
Philips is the perfect example, as I managed to get all my Hue equipment refunded to around 80% of the purchase price 2 years after the purchase.
They refused so I initiated a small claim, which they lost because they breached consumer law.
It’s not rocket science. The problem is that many consumers aren’t aware of their rights, so do nothing about it.
Show the ruling because I bet they just didn't turn up. Stop with the anecdotes and bring something tangible.
I don't like it either but it is what it is.
Wow, insulting others when you clearly have no clue what you are talking about.
In the EU a license agreement cant override your consumer rights. If the car was marketed as having a cardata feature and now that feature is restricted, under EU law you are entitled for it to be restored or fairly compensated - which could mean returning the car if it was a marketed feature and a major factor in the purchasing decision - although it’s more likely to be a monetary compensation for minor features. There’s even specific guidance for “digital elements” of products to cover things exactly like this.
I haven’t returned a car, but I have either returned or requested compensation for other consumer items for similar reasons - and was compensated fairly given their use.
>> Why should a car be different in regards to software than your washing machine, tv or iPhone?
The car shouldn't be different from the washing machine, the TV, and the iPhone. I should get a refund if functionality is removed from any of them after purchase.