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316

Yeah... If your primary customer is in the tinker/maker/nerd/hacker community you should probably not piss them off. They are the very people that support you and most people have no want or need to own a 3d printer... AND they don't have enough spite to go after you when you are a dick.

Archive: https://archive.today/p6ufq

From the post:

>Bambu Lab makes the best, most accessible 3D printers yet, but that reputation is suddenly under siege. It all started when Paweł Jarczak received a private message from the company on Reddit asking him to delete his code. Now the 3D printing community is lining up behind Jarczak to fund a war against Bambu — and the future of 3D printers could be at stake. Jarczak is a developer who shared a way to let people remote control their Bambu printers without using Bambu software. But Bambu wanted to lock down its system, despite relying on open-source code. That provoked a furious coalition of open-source advocates and YouTubers to respond. “I’ll put up $10,000 to teach bambu labs a lesson,” declared consumer rights advocate Louis Rossmann, pledging to help defend Jarczak in court. “I’m never buying a Bambu Lab 3D printer again,” stated maker Jeff Geerling, adding that he’d gladly chip in too. (He’s changed the YouTube title since.)

Yeah... If your primary customer is in the tinker/maker/nerd/hacker community you should probably not piss them off. They are the very people that support you and most people have no want or need to own a 3d printer... AND they don't have enough spite to go after you when you are a dick. Archive: https://archive.today/p6ufq From the post: >>Bambu Lab makes the best, most accessible 3D printers yet, but that reputation is suddenly under siege. It all started when Paweł Jarczak received a private message from the company on Reddit asking him to delete his code. Now the 3D printing community is lining up behind Jarczak to fund a war against Bambu — and the future of 3D printers could be at stake. Jarczak is a developer who shared a way to let people remote control their Bambu printers without using Bambu software. But Bambu wanted to lock down its system, despite relying on open-source code. That provoked a furious coalition of open-source advocates and YouTubers to respond. “I’ll put up $10,000 to teach bambu labs a lesson,” declared consumer rights advocate Louis Rossmann, pledging to help defend Jarczak in court. “I’m never buying a Bambu Lab 3D printer again,” stated maker Jeff Geerling, adding that he’d gladly chip in too. (He’s changed the YouTube title since.)
[–] 1 pt

As long as the law can make it clear exactly how much they have to adhere and they actually do it they can be "forgiven". Until then, I won't be buying one even though I was thinking about it after I finally have more space and move.

For now I will stick to my very old but working printer.