John Deere is justifiably notorious for its campaign to block farmers from fixing their own agricultural equipment. Deer is #RightToRepair's archnemesis. No amount of misleading feel-good of its heavy hand on farmers' tractors forever can change that.
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There are many reasons to worry about Deere's assertion of a monopoly over farmers' ability to maintain their vital equipment. 3/
For one thing, Deere has *terrible* information security, and the defects in its software infrastructure means that much of the world's agricultural machinery could be bricked or corrupted by attackers:
Food security is so important, and Deere has such a comprehensive monopoly over the world's food production, that agricultural right to repair is an absolute no-brainer. 5/
There's a reason that farms have had workshops since the dawn of agriculture: when the storm is coming and the crops need harvesting, you can't wait for a service-call:
Naturally, farmers understand this. They have a front-row seat to Deere's ugly, extractive practices. Farmers are some of #R2R's most eloquent, best-organized activists. 7/
Even though Deere's lobbyists has so many statehouses sewn up that they manage to kill agricultural right-to-repair laws:
This won't last forever. The idea that farmers are too stupid to maintain their own tractors is belied by Deere's own long history of improving its products by sending field engineers to identify and copy farmers' own modifications to their tractors:
But the anti-repair axis - led by Apple, and incorporating Big Car, Big Ag, and Big Appliances - are determined to milk their monopoly over repair for as long as they possibly can, and this is one area where their innovative genius can't be denied:
Here's one way that Deere can extend the life of its repair monopoly: they can refuse service to farmers who complain about Deere's behavior. That's what happened to Jared Wilson, a Missouri farmer and vocal repair advocate:
As @mjgault writes for @motherboard, Wilson's tractor's AC stopped working, which meant that he would have to bring in the harvest under sweltering conditions - stuck in a glass box under direct sun for hours a day. 12/
Wilson only has one dealership within range: Heritage Tractor, whose manager refused to service his tractor.
The manager said that Wilson was "not a profitable customer" because he had complained about Heritage to Deere corporate. 13/
The dealership told him that his practice of complaining to "outside people" about repair meant that his business was no longer welcome. Which "outside people" has Wilson been speaking to? 14/
Wilson is a fifth-generation farmer, whose forebears also used Deere products. 15/
He seen the number of Deere authorized service centers in his region dwindle from three to just one in under a decade. That drawdown occurred as Deere was making it illegal for farmers to fix their own tractors, or source repairs from third parties:
For Wilson to get his tractor fixed anywhere but Heritage, he'd have to haul it 80 miles. Luckily, Wilson eventually got Heritage to fix his tractor.
All it took was a complaint to the FTC. 17/
Deere says that today's farmers lack the modern skills needed to maintain their own equipment. They imply that the skills deficit here is an inability to maintain electronic equipment. 18/
It turns out that the real vital skill for the modern farmer is the ability to complain effectively to federal regulators. 19/
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Inflation is here, and there are a *lot* of explanations for it. People who worry about the monetary supply blame it on excessive money creation during the pandemic and uppity workers demanding higher wages:
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
Anti-monopolists blame inflation on price-gouging. CEOs in concentrated industries give investor presentations where they chortle, rub their hands, twirl their mustaches, and announce their profits are sky-high thanks to their ability to raise prices:
Earlier this year, a person disagreed with something I said on Twitter. They picked a fight with me about it I told them I thought they were wrong, and why, and that would have been the end of it if they hadn't threatened to sue me.
Even as they were continuing to pick fights with me on Twitter, they had their general counsel send me a note telling me that I had to sit down with them and have them explain why I was wrong or they'd sue me.
Now, I've been sued by angry rich people who wanted me to stop criticizing them before. I won (thanks to California's powerful anti-SLAPP laws), but my insurer paid $60k just for the legal work to win the SLAPP claim.
How John Deere leverages repair-blocking into gag orders: A farmer's only local dealership refuses to fix his tractor because he advocates for Right to Repair.