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Comment by petesergeant

3 years ago

Sure, but this is a pretty well-established model for computers; if it's more economical for the company to install the hardware on every model, but only charge consumers who want to utilize it a premium, then I don't see the problem. Price competition should keep the market price for any feature reasonable.

Can you give some examples of computer hardware that are paywall locked?

  • Of the to of my head:

    * Intel xeon processors have software defined feature sets that are unlocked by a license.

    * Nvidia low hash rate GPUs

    * Nvidia vGPU on consumer GPUs (there are hacks to enable it)

    * hardware video / audio encoders in mobile processors that require licensing to use.

    * Sony cameras have licenses that allow you to unlock extra features

    * Cisco do this all the time with their router HW.

    • Features that are locked off permanently are less scummy. It's a bad way of emulating different production lines, but at least it doesn't let them charge ongoing rent.

      2 replies →

  • I don’t like the idea, but CPUs have long been an example (fused at the factory to disable cores, for example).

    • Often times though, the cores are fused because they are malfunctioning. If the option is between that and just getting rid of the CPU, I'd rather they do that.

  • It's heavily implemented in Cisco and juniper routers for serious ISP applications. In addition to yearly paid support contracts for operating system updates.

    • TBF though it seems like large companies love paying through the nose for support contracts so managers can point fingers when things go wrong.