Louis Rossmann made a video on it, and something that came to mind while I was watching it was that while regulation can in fact be abused, I think some regulation has to be in place because a company that can charge whatever it wants for a car doing this just for the sake of control is awful. Do we really own the things we buy, or do the corporations?
I know in the EU, they have a lot more laws/regulations about warranties and other R2R shit, I just want to be able to fix the shit I own by myself without the company hindering me from doing so because they want to treat me like a leasee while charging me purchase prices.
Edit: Starting in South Korea, but very concerned that it could be brought here considering horse armor started the gaming industry’s bullshit.
To better serve our customers we are announcing a subscription plan for direct fuel injection for all existing models...
Want your turbos on your turbo engine to work? Well we're going to have to charge you a monthly subscription plus the carbon tax for that.
I just bought an Outback and, for some reason, the sunroof option was inseparable from their network service. It's a mystery to me how the two are related.
But good god did going through all of the options raise my blood pressure. I hate the car industry, and I hate that the PC industry is going the exact same direction with overpriced unmodifiable gear. Piece of molded rubberized plastic? $100. Another piece of molded plastic? $250. Set of black lug nuts instead of stainless steel? $300. Fuck you.
Honda only adds intermittent windshield wipers to their mid and upper trims. A basic feature with most other manufacturers. Honda wants you to pay $2000 more to get that $20 switch.
They're probably part of the same module, so it's cheaper for them to just disable or remove(or not install) the entire module. A lot of the computer modules in cars cover multiple things, regardless of whether their paid for or not. It's just how mass production works.