The subscription model for features on a car is shitty for a host of reasons, but at least they’re still offering the option to buy them outright like normal. If you really value ownership then at least you can purchase the car and buy these addons up front.
The problem isn’t just the subscription model itself, the problem is the means by which they enforce it: by infecting your car with DRM.
When you buy a thing, you’re supposed to own that thing, which means you have every right to modify it in any way you see fit – including to “unlock” any physical capabilities of it that aren’t enabled to begin with.
What these car companies – even ones offering to unlock your property for a “one-time” fee – are doing is trying to destroy your property rights, and that ought to be entirely unacceptable to everyone.
gt24@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Looking around a bit, it seems like you have a myAudi app which you register your VIN to which then lets you access the additional features.
www.audiusa.com/us/web/…/vehicle-functions.html
Problem with that is that it implies that you are the one purchasing the features for that vehicle. If the vehicle is sold as used then you unlink the VIN from your account so that the new buyer can register the VIN to them. Then the new buyer seems to have “nothing” and has to “purchase any of those features permanently” again.
With such a system in place, I could imagine that a proper Audi dealership can be authorized to “continue a permanent subscription” to a new used car buyer (or Audi can just offer those sorts of upcharges at the point of sale).
Regardless, permanent only likely applies to your ownership and not to the vehicle itself.
atrielienz@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Tesla’s do this.