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Transportation Government

Carmakers Launch Desperate Attempt To Delay Massachusetts Right-to-Repair Law (gizmodo.com) 63

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: Major car manufacturers aren't giving up on their efforts to stymie Massachusetts' right to repair legislation. Less than two years after residents in the state voted in favor of updated right to repair laws that would let independent auto repair shops receive telematics data from vehicles, groups representing auto manufacturers are now introducing their own new proposals that would delay the law's implementation. If passed, the two new proposals, first viewed by Motherboard, would push back the starting date of Massachusetts' right to repair law to 2025, three years later than the original 2022 start date. Though supporters of the proposal argue the extra years would give automakers more time to comply with the laws, the efforts were derided by critics like Massachusetts Right to Repair Coalition Director Tommy Hickey.

"Massachusetts consumers have spoken, and the law now gives them the right to control their own repair data so that they can get their car fixed where they want," Hickey told the Gloucester Daily Times. "However, instead of listening to their customers and attempting to comply with the ballot initiative, automakers and dealers filed a baseless, anti-democratic lawsuit." For those unaware, Massachusetts' 2020 law was intended to make it easier for small auto shops to access diagnostic data about vehicles without the need for proprietary tools available only to manufacturers. When the law goes into effect, The Drive notes, it would require any automaker doing business in the state to allow this telematics data to be accessible through a smartphone app.

The auto industry has argued making such tools more widely available could come with cybersecurity and vehicle safety risks, though that line of argument has often come across as more akin to fearmongering than actual concern for consumers' well-being. (One ad paid for by the Alliance for Automotive Innovation tried to convince viewers a sexual predator could use vehicle data to stalk and prey upon their victims). Industry groups representing carmakers even went as far as to file a lawsuit in U.S. District Court arguing the law was unconstitutional. The ruling on that suit has yet to be determined.

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Carmakers Launch Desperate Attempt To Delay Massachusetts Right-to-Repair Law

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  • it's ok to be raped by the dealer but not be 3rd party repair.

    But there ad's to stop this say people can tack you and rape you if anyone can get the tools.

  • hmmm... (Score:2, Interesting)

    Back in my day we had carburetors not computers... No chip delays to get a car either... ahh the good old days...

    • A few of my vehicles still do... and not a single one of them has any built-in cell modem.

      I just bought a new-to-us vehicle, and specifically went with a 2014 to avoid the crap Honda added to that model beginning in 2016. (I would have also bought a 2015 model, but couldn't find what I was looking for within any sort of reasonable distance).

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      And you measured mileage in telephone poles per gallon.

      • ...and polluted, and were generally unsafe, and were in need of very regular maintenance and repair. Sure, they _could_ be repaired (in contrast to current vehicles), but they often _needed_ repair.

        I've rebuilt one than one classic Mustang (had a '72 and a '69 as daily drivers) but they are called a hobby for a reason. They require constant attention.

        • I don't know about you, but my 21st century car still needs regular maintenance and repair.
          • I don't know about you, but my 21st century car still needs regular maintenance and repair.

            Yes, but does it need an oil change every three months? Plugs every year? Points? Carb adjusted when "it doesn't feel right"? Choke? Flush the cooling system? Replace the brake shoes (pad last far longer and stop better). Flushed the brake fluid? Replaced the automatic transmission fluid? Set the valve lash? Set the timing? Even fuel and air filters last longer today.

            Everything that I've mentioned was maintenance - not repair. But repairs have gone down dramatically too. When was the last time that you repl

      • In Europe the most fuel efficient car you can get is the Citroën C2V, which launched in 1948. Mainly because it weighs 600kg, whereas the modern equivalent, the Citroën C1 is 800kg.

        • We had something similar here. Everyone cites the Honda CRX hF model from the late 80s that got almost 50mpg. They falsely claim its the automakers deliberately making cars less efficient because they are somehow in bed with a Scandinavian oil cartel. However, the weight of that car was so light, you could push start it with one leg out the drivers door ala The Flinstones. What people fail to realize is that post 80s safety legislations adds considerable weight incorporating all the new safety standards. W
          • Bull, aside from the roll cage all the safety stuff masses very little compared to the mass of the rest of the car.

            On the other hand, the trend to larger cars with more powerful engines (especially bad in the US, but common worldwide) can't avoid adding a lot of weight. Just look at a side-by-side comparison of the Mini Cooper, a car still known for it's small size. https://diminishedvalueofgeorg... [diminished...eorgia.com]

            Roughly 20% longer and wider, and about 5% taller. That's over 50% greater volume, while the mass increased

            • They had to increase the actual metal structures to have more crumple zones. Thats a lot of mass right there. They wanted more 'plastic deformation' of the chassis in order to absorb more energy. We arent just talking the 6 airbags and onboard computers. Im talking structurally adding more metal.
              • Good point - crumple zones are another structural safety feature that (potentially) adds real mass as well, and is a contributing factor to vehicles becoming larger.

                My point was mainly that all the stuff you actually mentioned amounts to little more than a rounding error, and that the trend toward much larger vehicles is responsible for *far* more mass increase than all of them combined.

  • So caring these automakers. They (FORD) even sell hot tunes for their cars so tampering with the ecu is totally fine if you pay them. And its not about emissions after many of their tunes were found to be illegal and they had to pull many back via EPA.

    Fraud fraud fraud.

  • Benz (Score:5, Interesting)

    by speedlaw ( 878924 ) on Thursday January 13, 2022 @09:21PM (#62171493) Homepage
    I had to replace a headlight on a Benz because deer. The light had to be married to the car, so they have to use a specific computer, which communicates to GERMANY, to marry the light module to the car... To replace a headlight. This legislation is way overdue.
    • I have a 35-year-old Mercedes. A new headlight can be bought in any parts store. You can replace it yourself.... if you have a screwdriver.

      • Mercedes is starting to disco some parts for some classics though. Just try getting a proper lock set for a W126.

        • Ignition tumblers with keys are cheap. Not sure about doors - mine have been converted to remote locking. Most typical replacement parts are plentiful, but some more obscure ones are no longer available. People are starting to 3-D print some parts

          The result is that my car is now worth more than a Mercedes half its age.

          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            Door locks are easy. Cars, despite their price, are protected by extremely weak locks known as wafer locks. They are technologically as advanced as the lock on your desk, and considered a step down in security from the standard pin-tumbler lock design you have on your front door.

            The ignition lock is the most sophisticated of wafer locks, while the doors implement a subset of the wafers. This is why your car key may be able to open a startlingly large number of similar vehicles from the same manufacturer. We

        • by thomn8r ( 635504 )

          Mercedes is starting to disco some parts for some classics though. Just try getting a proper lock set for a W126.

          laughs in UniMog

    • Re:Benz (Score:4, Informative)

      by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Friday January 14, 2022 @01:06AM (#62171865) Homepage Journal

      VW has to "pair" the battery with the car. You can't replace your own battery any more.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      That may be a legal requirement for safety.

      Mercedes has been fitting LED and matrix headlights for a while now. The LED ones are so bright that they have to incorporate auto-levelling, so that when your car is not level the lights dip a bit to avoid blinding on-coming traffic.

      The matrix ones require the camera system in the vehicle to be operating and calibrated, and for each individual light to be calibrated too. If you don't know, matrix lights are basically on high beam all the time, but can dim individu

      • Poster is correct. It all back tracks to German law and TUV approval. In another car I have a set of LED bulbs replacing a set of H7's, which I swore I'd never do, having seen the horrible examples we all know. Germany approved the Phillips Ultinon 9000 for road use, so I bought a set, and wow, suddenly my car can see at night but I don't glare people (yes, I re aimed). While researching replacement lights for my Mk6 Jetta, I found a set of expensive replacements HID and housing ($1200) that were cited
    • The light had to be married to the car, so they have to use a specific computer, which communicates to GERMANY, to marry the light module to the car.

      Can you give some more details? Extraordinary claims and all that.

      • Fair question. The body shop replaced the light. They sent it to a shop who appears to specialize in (as in owns-rents the computer to marry modules). I knew this because the car tracks with GPS and through the app I saw it was three towns away from the shop, so I went to visit. it was hooked to a computer. The shop owner was nice and explained what was going on. When I got tha car back the new light wasn't aimed. That turned out to be a trip to the actual dealer, because you need Xentry and an alight
        • Thank you, that is interesting to know. I'd love to see the beam forming in action. I've been out of the automobile industry for literally two decades.

  • You know a law is spot on when the big companies that would lose a locked revenue channel are screaming that they don't want it to happen.

  • supporters of the proposal argue the extra years would give automakers more time to comply with the laws

    More time to comply? More like more time to *avoid* complying.

    The information is already readily available to brand-partnered mechanics, the law just requires that they make the same information available to independent mechanics. The time needed to comply is whatever it takes to hand a folder to someone.

    The *only* benefit of giving them more time is that during the delay they can continue fighting having to every comply at all, while continuing to reap excess profits.

  • One thing in common many industries have is that they're total fucking bullshit. Real estate agents, taxis, and quite obviously cars. The former two raked in fat profits due to information asymmetry: no one had access to the magic 'realtors only' listings of comparable sales, out-of-towners didn't know when they were being taken for a literal ride in NYC.

    Cars obviously too had bullshit profits, but that was largely baked into the initial sale... and the internet cut into those ill-gotten gains quite subst

  • The auto industry has argued making such tools more widely available could come with cybersecurity and vehicle safety risks

    Ah, so the manufacturer's have discovered and now admitted that they didn't engineer appropriate security into their systems and instead relied on security through obscurity.

    The information they are required to release under this bill is already known to many people -- such as the engineers that built it and perhaps even "authorized" service providers/vendors. These individuals apparent

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