In Defense of Hacks
It was not necessity that was the mother of invention, but rather frustration during wedding planning that led me to build a printing press out of Ikea furniture. Companies were quoting prices upward of $10 per copy for letterpress invitations, and I figured there had to be a way I could make them myself. And after a couple of flashes of ingenuity, about $200 of equipment, and a whole mess of ink and sawdust on my carpet, I had turned an Ikea Kullen nightstand into a .
In this Futurography series on the future of ownership, it鈥檚 worth contemplating the full range of uses that owners can put to their possessions, and do-it-yourself represents the best of those uses in my mind. But technologies and laws are beginning to shift what it means to own something, and there are real questions on the horizon about where DIYers fit into this changing landscape of ownership.
Hacking is often associated with malicious computer activity, but it has a more : repurposing a system or device to a clever and unexpected use. And some of the most brilliant hacks involve physical things. The website collects examples like mine of repurposing Ikea furniture in all manner of ways: file boxes turn into an ; a mirror becomes a . This DIY experimentation isn鈥檛 limited to Ikea furniture, of course. Some enjoy , the practice of rearranging the wires in toys to produce unintentional music. Others to achieve efficiencies of 100 miles per gallon.
DIY creativity is not new鈥攊t has origins at least in the arts and crafts movement of the late 1800s, the Japanese wabi-sabi aesthetic, and American pioneerism鈥攂ut it has experienced a modern resurgence. Consumer-innovators spend an estimated $20.2 billion a year on creative activities, according to . And new technologies have of course helped grow DIY practices: 3-D printing puts manufacturing capabilities into home enthusiasts鈥 hands, and the internet makes it ever easier for creators to share ideas and techniques with one another.
But as helpful as new technology has been, DIYers depend also on one thing as old as the hills: traditional notions of property ownership.
Ownership of a thing grants a number of privileges that the owner alone enjoys over the thing鈥攚hat lawyers sometimes call the 鈥渂undle of rights.鈥 Chief among this bundle is the right of possession, or the right of the owner to use property in any way desired (short of violating the law or harming others, of course). In 1765 the legal commentator described the 鈥渇ree use, enjoyment, and disposal鈥 of property as an 鈥渁bsolute right, inherent in every Englishman.鈥
The right of possession is what allows for hacking, for a consumer to use a product in a way not intended or even desired by the manufacturer or seller of that product. But that right is quickly being undermined today. Product manufacturers more and more often install tiny locks on their products before sale, keeping purchasers from fully exploring and enjoying those products that they own.
Some of these locks are physical. Kyle Wiens, founder of iFixit, Apple鈥檚 recent trend of using glue and proprietary screws to hold MacBooks together, making them nearly impossible to repair, let alone modify. Other manufacturers use software or electronics鈥攐ftentimes described as digital rights management, or DRM鈥攖o prevent use of third-party parts or customizations. that would lock up when used with nongenuine ink; (and then somewhat walked back) a coffee machine that would brew only authorized grounds.
The more troubling locks, however, are ones based not on physics or electronics but on law. Everyone has seen (or, more likely, has ) end-user license agreements, those agonizingly long legal documents attached to shrink wrap or displayed on software. These agreements regularly disallow purchasers鈥攐wners鈥攆rom fully using their own purchased products. Sometimes the penalty of violation is relatively small鈥攙oiding the warranty for example鈥攂ut manufacturers have used the law to add sharper teeth to those agreements.
of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, for example, makes it a crime to circumvent in certain situations 鈥渢echnological protection measures鈥 (that is, DRM) imposed on a product, and product manufacturers have sought to use this provision to prevent work on , , and (though courts have rejected Section 1201鈥檚 power to do so).
More troublingly, a federal appeals court that a manufacturer who owns a patent on a product (in this case, a printer toner cartridge) has the power to set conditions on use of that product, such that violation of any condition is punishable as an infringement of the patent. In other words, if you modify your Internet-of-Things cat feeder against the manufacturer鈥檚 will, you鈥檙e not just clever鈥.
Product manufacturers have various reasons for locking down their products鈥攖o prevent accidental injuries from misuse or to block aftermarket competitors, for example. But forcing consumers to use their possessions only as directed discourages creativity. Consider one practice of in printer cartridges with food coloring, for printing on cakes. Professor von Hippel that if the printer manufacturer disallowed refilling ink cartridges, then this sort of creative discovery might never have been made.
In this clash of DIY culture and DRM control, there is an important role for those who engage in product hacking and those who love what they do. Companies that make products often have a vision of how they would like their users and competitors to behave, and use law and technology to force compliance with that vision. But the messier, more unexpected reality benefits everyone, from the hackers who enjoy the challenge of invention, to the public who benefits from new knowledge, to the companies themselves who regularly take up and profit from their customers鈥 ideas. DIYers need to remind companies to see beyond the tips of their corporate lawyers鈥 noses, to see the future benefits of giving consumers full ownership.
Companies, for their part, have an obligation to listen to this community and to encourage DIY experimentation. Consider the situation of the Ikea Hackers website from a few years ago. The website has no affiliation with Ikea the furniture company, and the company, protective of control over its name and trademarks, . Enormous public outcry ensued, leading Ikea to completely reverse course, not only allowing the website to stay up but going so far as to invite the website鈥檚 founder to a and a personal meeting with the CEO.
Between a shutdown strategy and a build-up partnership, did Ikea make the right choice? Certainly it worked for me. I went shopping there last week, and I鈥檓 already thinking of what I can do with this new bed.
This article was originally published in and is part of the of , a series in which Future Tense introduces readers to the technologies that will define tomorrow. Each month, we鈥檒l choose a new technological issue and break it down. Future Tense is a collaboration among , 国产视频, and .