this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2024
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The electronic key I purchased and collected from my own hardware is "hacking" because Nintendo's doesn't intend it? Maybe the legality of selling a tool to get the key is a hard concept to grasp because the premise is objectionable. If a Switch makes a good doorstop then it will be doing it's "intended purpose" if that's what I intend for my property.
I'm against companies having unjust control over our own computing. Eventually we will stop tolerating the abuse of people contributing to an open/libre community.
You might own the hardware, but you don't own the rights to the OS that runs on it. The encryption key is part of that software.
It's not a hard concept to grasp. If I was openly selling a tool to break the activation lock on Windows, I could expect the same result.
That's a ridiculous idea. If I buy a computer with an OS that has an encryption key to protect the hard drive, and later I need that key to remove my data to another system, I have an entirely reasonable expectation that I'm allowed to do so, regardless of how much the computer manufacturer doesn't want me to.