McDonald’s soft-serve ice cream machines are regularly broken, and it’s not just your perception. When repair vendor and advocate iFixit was filming a video about the topic, it checked tracking map McBroken and found that 34 percent of the machines in the state of New York were reported inoperable. As I write this, the nationwide number of broken machines is just above 14 percent.

To improve the nation’s semi-frozen milk fat infrastructure, iFixit has done two things. One, as first reported by 404 Media, is to join with interest group Public Knowledge to petition the Copyright Office for an exemption allowing people to fix commercial equipment, such as McDonald’s ice cream machines and other industrial kitchen equipment, without fear of reprisal under Section 1201 of the DMCA.

  • TrekHuis
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    1 year ago

    Not in the USA, but my password is my unique key that in cryptic my data, so therefore an FBI or any other agency is not allowed to pass it even if they could, no? As I’m the person who rode this password and therefore am the copyright holder of that password.

    • roguetrick@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Courts decide what a creative work is, not your personal attestation. Courts will not decide that your password is a creative work, in pretty much any context. You can’t copyright a password.

    • coffeebiscuit@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      As longe as you don’t do crimes …

      Is the police allowed to enter your house when needed by law?

      Besides this, you are probably replying the wrong post.

    • JustAManOnAToilet@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You might be thinking of the password vs fingerprint phone unlock. Courts decided that while your fingerprint could be compelled, you couldn’t be compelled to reveal your password as that was private knowledge. That isn’t due to copyright though, it’s a 5th Amendment issue here in the US (The Fifth Amendment grants anyone in the U.S. the right to remain silent, which includes the right to not turn over information that could incriminate them in a crime. These days, those protections extend to the passcodes that only a device owner knows).

      • Bassman1805@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We’ve written plenty of legal justification around it, but ultimately it just comes down to the fact that police CAN physically place your finger into your phone, but cannot extract a password from your brain that you don’t want to give up.

        If we had the ability to read minds, there’d be legal justification to grab your password within a year.

          • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            You can always put your phone into lockdown mode so that the password is required to unlock the phone, not just your fingerprint.

            Face and fingerprint unlock is too convenient for me to not have it at all.

            • hoodatninja@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              That requires me to do it potentially under duress, with little to no time, etc. During a crisis it can’t be assumed that the first thing I’ll do is lockdown my phone. Anything that requires an anticipatory step is inherently risky.

        • brianorca@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          There are technologies the police are not allowed to use for constitutional reasons. If brain reading was a thing, the 5th amendment would still protect you. Not that they wouldn’t try before getting smacked down.