PungoteagueDave
Well-known member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2025
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 800
- Reaction score
- 863
- Location
- Boynton Beach
- Vehicles
- ‘25 Tesla Cybertruck, ‘26 Tesla MY Launch, ‘13 Porsche C4S, ‘26 BMW R1300 GSA
- Occupation
- retired
Dude, chill. Be nice. I did not attack you in any way. I wasn't talking about music licenses. I was talking about software licenses. On those you have much more privity and can be contractually bound. When Tesla has you sign a license allowing them perpetual access and software changes you have a choice. This is NOT a hypothetical... we all signed software licenses with the purchase. I agree with you that they cannot remove a feature that was in the original specs at the time of your delivery, for example on the window sticker or marketing materials. But they sure can modify it, including using a reasonable man's interpretation of the feature definition. I believe that Tesla is liable for failing on numerous promises and remains exposed, but the idea that they cannot change your software is ludicrous. CheersYoure making up boloney facts and moving goalposts. There is no written agreement when you buy music. For those that do haVE SOME AGREEMENT you assent to, sure, it could make up terms that features are limited in time or can go away without your consent but then they’d have a big ftc problem with it being a “perpetual license” which they would lose. So you’re wrong. Bottom line when you buy the license it’s yours in at least that state basically for the life of at least the device it was licensed to or your life if no specific device is part of the license.
Could they come up with some contract doing what you say, yes, but then they’d couldn’t sell it as a perpetual license or they’d lose the ftc lawsuit on it and would have to label it differently. Also you forget this is at least initially bound by sale of a physical car with expressed features, which makes things much more difficult for Tesla as it’s an advertised feature you buy on physical goods with marketed features not expressing your hypothetical.
If you assent to an upgrade that takes away a feature, that’s YOUR choice, not a dictate of Tesla or anyone else. But you can refuse the update and stick with what you got. Or if the company dies, you get to keep using the software, which would not be a thing if Microsoft killed office 365, you have nothing, but if you have your office 2024, you get to keep using it all you like.
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