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.
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.