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  • Epson’s bricked printers highlight the industry’s reparability problem


    Karlston

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    • 4 comments
    • 759 views
    • 5 minutes

    Printer makers have a history of invasive practices that hurt user repairability, experience.

     

    Epson printers have had a nasty little issue for years. Some models will abruptly brick, even if they seem to be working fine, because the ink pads are supposedly too saturated. Epson has endured bad publicity the past few weeks as users, websites, and right-to-repair activists condemned the company for designing its printers to eventually stop functioning, highlighting just how big of a problem printers continue to be in the fight for the right to repair.

     

    According to the Fight to Repair newsletter, Epson printers—including the L360, L130, L220, L310, L365, and potentially others—may suddenly display a message saying that they have reached the end of their service life and then stop printing. Epson told The Verge this week that this is because saturated ink pads could leak ink throughout the devices.

     

    Until this week, Epson's support page about the message said:

     

    At some point, the product will reach a condition where either satisfactory print quality cannot be maintained or components have reached the end of their usable life. Epson is committed to ensuring the proper operation of all our devices to minimize the risks of property damage or personal injury during the life span of the product. The printers are designed to stop operating at the point where further use without replacing the ink pads could create risks of property damage from ink spills or safety issues related to excess ink contacting an electrical component.

     

    The issue has been ongoing for years, and there are multiple videos instructing people how to fix the ink pads. In late July, however, the issue hit Twitter, as spotted by Gizmodo this week, putting fresh attention on Epson's printer bricking and leading to allegations of planned obsolescence.

     

    Epson is not the only company to break its own seemingly functional printers over ink issues. Another recent example is HP, which in 2020 killed ink cartridges that weren't part of its Instant Ink subscription program. The company still continues the practice. HP also has a history of trying to use DRM to block users from using non-HP ink cartridges in its printers.

     

    Canon doesn't want people to use non-proprietary ink so badly that it inadvertently made its own ink unusable earlier this year.

     

    Printer companies have such a penchant for controlling how you use their products that the issue has gone all the way to the Supreme Court. In 2017, Lexmark battled to stop Impression Products from circumnavigating DRM to refill and resell its ink cartridges—and lost.

     

    Indeed, printers have a checkered reputation when it comes to this sort of thing, and the situation doesn't seem to be getting better. Just look at how Epson handled its recent bad PR.

     

    This week, as noticed by The Verge, the company changed the support page about its end-of-service message, putting its one-time Maintenance Reset Utility, which enables the continued use of the printer temporarily, closer to the top of the page. Before this week, the support page was quick to claim that "most consumers who are out of warranty elect to replace a lower-cost printer when they receive an end of life service message."

     

    But the page now points to Epson's ink pad replacement service and more prominently showcases the company's recycling program. Finally, the page eliminated the previously quoted statement that tries to convince people that it's perfectly normal to get rid of their would-be functioning printer and give Epson more money upon seeing the end-of-service message.

     

    These are minuscule steps, though. Epson still doesn't readily offer repair manuals, tools, or parts. And it still says that only Epson or one of its partners can address the ink pads, implying that you or your favorite local repair shop cannot. This ignores the video tutorials showing that people have figured out how to address the ink pad issues on their own.

     

    Without some extra push, printer companies will continue to employ invasive methods for controlling how their products are used. Some believe that push could come from the government.

     

    “It wouldn’t surprise me to see some pushback along the lines of the FTC’s intervention in the Revolv bricking incident a few years back,” Aaron Perzanowski, a professor at the University of Michigan School of Law and author of The Right to Repair: Reclaiming the Things We Own book, told the Fight to Repair newsletter.

     

    In 2016, the FTC wrote a letter (PDF) to Google Nest detailing concerns that the company's bricking of Revolv Smart Home Hub devices would cause "unjustified, substantial consumer injury that consumers themselves could not reasonably avoid." The agency elected not to recommend enforcement action, partially because Nest gave refunds.

     

     

    Epson’s bricked printers highlight the industry’s reparability problem


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    Something I have always wondered. What stops them from doing this same crap with laser printers too. As people get tired with ink ones and move towards laser, something will be invented to make laser ones useless too.

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    Theres a simple fix..Hurt the printer companies where it hurts them the most.. THEIR BANK BALANCE..

    in the original story above is mentions HP using DRM to stop people using compatible carts.. so Don't buy a HP.

    Canon again.. so Don't buy a canon.. if you own a canon you just make sure your next printer ISN'T ONE..

    And the same goes for Epson.. as well.. why should we the consumer put up with their ****..

    Either sell the pads so we can fix them ourselfs or don't, in which case why would we the customer buy another epson.

    especially when you look at costs of the new printers.. it may seem ok for you to throw out your £50 printer.. thats 2 years old..

    but what about your top of the range £350 printers.. if your printing daily.. and using their expensive ink. which epson themselves dont actually make.

    and your pads get filled quicker.. are you really going to say oh.. i need a new £350 printer.

    Yes you read that right.. Epson Don't make their own INK.. they use a INK COMPANY who makes their ink.. to their standards..

    the same ink company also makes INK for epson compatible cartridges usually only changing one ingredient.

    Infact in the UK there are 2 ink manufacturers.. who make the inks of most of the printers companies.

    Epson supplies the ink company with the cartridges and they fill them and pack them.. then send them back. where epson then sells them..

     

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    The trouble is that if you ignore all brands that do this, you're not left with much to choose from.

     

    They need serious pushback from consumers. Complaints from those who bought a printer and discover it's their outrageously priced brand of ink or nothing... complaints from those who didn't buy their printer because of this restriction.

     

    And get governments at all levels involved in recognising this for what it is... anti-competitive behaviour. I bet if say Ford vehicles forced owners to use fuel from one particular fuel chain, governments would be up Ford like a rat up a drainpipe.

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    true.. but if those other companies that don't do it.. end up getting more business.. epsons and those like em.. will have to think when their SHARES DROP BIG TIME,
    which means in turn profits drop. which in turn means the owners money drops..in the billions.. think about how many printers and ink that are sold daily..

    I personally own an epson sx200.. i've used compatibles with it since i ran out of epson ink..

    fun fact.. epson cartridges 6ml per cartridge.. compatibles 21ml per cartridge..

    epson carts £9+ SET OF 4 IS £38  compatibles 75p VIA ebay. usually buy the 16 cartridges for £10

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