The concept that the 1% (or the most affluent and powerful segment of society) is actively preventing true ownership of the things we buy isn’t a universally accepted notion.
Instead, it’s often discussed in the context of broader economic systems and practices that can restrict the sense of true ownership.
Here are several ways in which systems, policies, or practices can be seen to limit ownership, which some might attribute to the influence of the very wealthy or powerful corporations:
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Digital Rights Management (DRM): This technology restricts how digital content (e.g., e-books, video games, music, movies) can be used by consumers. For example, you may not be able to share an e-book or transfer it to another device due to DRM, limiting your control over the purchased product.
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Software as a Service (SaaS): Many companies have moved away from selling software as a one-time purchase to a subscription model, where users pay to access software on a monthly or annual basis. This means the user never truly owns the software and will lose access if they stop their subscription.
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End User License Agreements (EULAs): These agreements often contain clauses that limit how consumers can use products and can include provisions that prevent ownership transfer, modding, or reverse engineering.
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Proprietary Parts and Repair Restrictions: Some manufacturers use proprietary components and restrict third-party repairs (also known as “Right to Repair”). This forces consumers to use the manufacturer’s own services, which can be more expensive and further distances the owner from truly “owning” their product in terms of being able to maintain or modify it.
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Planned Obsolescence: Some argue that companies design products with a limited lifespan to encourage consumers to buy newer models. This practice means that even if one “owns” a product, its usefulness is artificially limited.
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Intellectual Property Laws: These laws can be used to create monopolies over knowledge and innovation, which can limit consumer rights to use and modify the products they purchase.
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Subscription-based Models: Companies are increasingly pushing towards subscription models for various goods and services, from vehicles to clothing. These models can undermine traditional ownership by making it more financially advantageous or convenient to rent or subscribe rather than own outright.
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Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) and Large Corporate Landlords: There’s a perception that these entities buy up substantial amounts of property, making it difficult for individuals to purchase a home due to increased prices and limited supply.
Ownership is in bad shape. Combined with the economic changes coming from technological advances, we’re in danger of intense kleptocracy.
Pretty sure a society built on an endless need to profit is always facing that danger.
Especially when it’s profit over sustainability.
Before this whole thing I was not very radical. Now I can’t help but see how our current system, economically and financially, is oriented around top down class warfare.
Most people just don’t have the time/energy to be radical because our lives are so exhausting already, thanks to overworking and social media exposure. Fear and exhaustion keep the population easy to push around. No one I know in IRL disagress with what I say about wall street, but none of them feel able to do something about it.
But learning about all this stuff has given me the energy (aka anger) and so I make the time to do something about it!
Being a family man the extent of my radicalism looks a lot like a sincere imitation of Calvin’s dad. I’m all for systemic change and I talk about the rationale as much as my friends and loved ones will tolerate, but I can’t exactly go around lighting cop cars on fire about it.
Haha yeah I have to bite my tongue most days as well. The last time someone asked me about it they apologized for causing me to go on a rant 😂
I’m hopeful that DRS advocacy will do a lot more for the average person than lighting up cop cars. We’re not as attention grabbing, but we’re saying a lot more and trying to provide a solution as well. That’s more than most forms of protest can do imo.
We had that once! It was called Feudalism back then!
This, right here. Glad to see this kind of reporting on how the 1% are now trying for “eternal profit” by forcing everyone to rent everything and never own anything.
I hope legislatures are paying attention.
They are and they’re also complicit.
There’s many things I don’t want to own. I don’t want to own a car or a bigger vehicle than a bike. I don’t want to own expensive niche equipment that I’ll rarely use. But heck, I’ll defend your right to own what you buy. Fuck these companies, we need need strict regulation now.
I bought a scale recently. I didn’t see info when buying it online but it requires an app or else its bricked. My phone was not up to snuff for their app so I had to return it. Device was too smart for its own good.
I hope returns on products like this become more and more common. If a damn scale can’t tell me how much I weight without an app then y’all can get fucked. If an app is required for a product to do anything then do I own that product or am I being owned?
At least leave options open if I can’t do the app.
It’s simple late stage capitalism where everything is rentier
This is the best summary I could come up with:
When you’re ready to head into the office, the smart thermostat automatically turns down the air-conditioning (a $10-a-month feature) as you use an app on your phone to remotely start your car (which costs you $20 a month).
In addition to the proliferation of meal-delivery boxes and streaming services, companies are in many cases making access to the very thing you bought contingent on your payment: no subscription and you’ve got a brick taking up space.
While software development and maintenance comes with its own set of costs, the overhead is much lower than hardware manufacturing and gives companies more opportunities to make an additional sale — meaning that recurring revenue comes with huge profit margins.
Take the experience of America’s farmers: Newer equipment like tractors and combines often require special tools that manufacturers offer exclusively to authorized dealers.
But inside these dense documents are rules that prevent people from fixing their goods or let the company take back ownership if they don’t approve of how customers use the product.
The US Federal Trade Commission and the US Department of Justice need to crack down on embedded software that forces product owners to pay monthly fees to use hardware they own.
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