I'm not sure if this is a good place to put this kind of news but it does have some relation to right to repair so fuck it, whatever. I may make more posts like this to document anti-repair measures taken by big companies in the future, depending on how I feel and how appropriate it may be.
Audiophile equipment company copyright strikes video by independent repairman
Sometime earlier this year, a customer experienced a problem with their $20,000 phonographic pre-amp (some audiophile crap) by Tom Evans Audio in which there was some buzz on the left channel. They sent it to the company to be repaired and after the product got fucked up in transit, was told it would cost thousands of dollars to repair. The customer thought this was unacceptable and told the company to send it to repairman Mark Maher, who happens to have an educational YouTube channel called Mend it Mark where he documents his repairs with a delightfully kind and courteous attitude. Mark made the video about the pre-amp in which he diagnosed the issue and successfully repaired it after disassembling and reverse engineering the pre-amp to the point of creating a custom service manual for it (despite Tom Evans
sanding off the labels of certain components).
Likely because the video unintentionally highlighted the laughably disproportionate price-to-quality ratio of the pre-amp (a lot of parts are seemingly DIY off-the-shelf components encapsulated in shitloads of plastic), Tom Evans responded to Mark's video in a blatant abuse of the copyright system by filing a copyright takedown against it causing Mark to get a copyright strike. On December 6 (likely around the same time the video was taken down), Mark posted a video to his channel in which he discussed the copyright claim, mentioned that there is a huge lack of information as for
what exactly was so infringing that the video had to be taken down, and almost passively aggressively mocks the quality of the product in his typical humorous fashion. Honestly, one of the funniest parts of the whole video near the end was when he "accidentally" included a piece of cardboard that was used to hold the casing together.
The right to repair community and audio community soon caught wind of the situation. Louis Rossmann uploaded a three-part series going over the situation as it developed and doesn't try to obfuscate his hate-filled contempt towards Tom Evans and companies like it for daring to fuck with people's rights to knowledge about how the products they pay for work and how to repair when they inevitably break. He signal boosted Mark's content by
re-uploading the deleted video to his own channel (with permission, of course) with an introduction to the video beforehand giving some context and coldly warning Tom Evans to not fuck with him. Here's the first two parts since they are purely commentary:
This is where the situation stands now. I learned about Mark through these videos and subscribed after giving some of them a watch because I found them interesting and I like how he presents them with a charming personality. You can check out his channel here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZHhLyDll3hYHC0pyjbWFJA