DRM in Cars Will Drive Consumers Crazy Forget extra cupholders or power windows:
the new Renault Zoe comes with a "feature" that absolutely nobody wants. Instead of selling consumers a complete car that they can use, repair, and upgrade as they see fit, Renault has opted to
lock purchasers into a rental contract with a battery manufacturer and enforce that contract with
digital rights management (DRM) restrictions that can remotely prevent the battery from charging at all.
We've long joined makers and tinkerers in warning that, as software becomes a part of more and more everyday devices, DRM and the legal restrictions on circumventing it will create hurdles to standard repairs and even operation. In the U.S., a car manufacturer who had wrapped its onboard software in technical restrictions could argue that attempts to get around those are in violation of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)—specifically section 1201, the notorious "anti-circumvention" provisions. These provisions make it illegal for users to circumvent DRM or help others do so, even if the purpose is perfectly legal otherwise. Similar laws exist around the world, and are even written into some international trade agreements—including,
according to a recently leaked draft, the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement.