Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
HP Printer The Courts IT

We Never Agreed To Only Buy HP Ink, Say Printer Owners (theregister.com) 116

HP "sought to take advantage of customers' sunk costs," printer owners claimed this week in a class action lawsuit against the hardware giant. The Register: Lawyers representing the aggrieved were responding in an Illinois court to an earlier HP motion to dismiss a January lawsuit. Among other things, the plaintiffs' filing stated that the printer buyers "never entered into any contractual agreement to buy only HP-branded ink prior to receiving the firmware updates." They allege HP broke several anti-competitive statutes, which they claim: "bar tying schemes, and certain uses of software to accomplish that without permission, that would monopolize an aftermarket for replacement ink cartridges, when these results are achieved in a way that 'take[s] advantage of customers' sunk costs.'"

In the case, which began in January, the plaintiffs are arguing that HP issued a firmware update between late 2022 and early 2023 that they allege disabled their printers if they installed a replacement cartridge that was not HP-branded. They are asking for damages that include the cost of now-useless third-party cartridges and an injunction to disable the part of the firmware updates that prevent the use of third-party ink.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

We Never Agreed To Only Buy HP Ink, Say Printer Owners

Comments Filter:
  • Haha, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @11:41AM (#64389404)

    But they agreed to buy HP printers. Suckers!

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jythie ( 914043 )
      Yeah.. where do they think those low low costs come from? Consumers often demand incompatible things and reward companies that give the illusion of reconciling them.
      • Re:Haha, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by SodaStream ( 6820788 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:39PM (#64389550)
        Or HP markets a printer and deceives customers by pushing firmware updates to them after they've purchased their printers, functionally changing the product they purchased.

        You don't have to bow to corporate.
      • Re:Haha, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @02:22PM (#64389858)

        Consumers here aren't demanding anything other than the product they purchased continues to work the way it did at the time of purchase.

      • Re:Haha, but... (Score:4, Informative)

        by sjames ( 1099 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @03:12PM (#64390026) Homepage Journal

        That would be the company's fault for creating the illusion that they would provide those things. If I lie and someone believes me, the consequences of that belief are all on me.

        Also, I doubt HP actually loses money on the printer, they just don't make a lot of money without the tying. You'd be amazed how much mark-up is put on things these days. It's why you sometimes see prices so low it's almost silly buying direct from Chinese companies. Note that the much more expensive product from an American or multi-national was probably made in the same factory by the same people.

        Somebody's got to pay for the expensive execs, private executive jet, and substantial campaign contributions.

    • Have you ever used HP electronics? They're cheap, they're unintuitive.
      The HP store would work if we adopted the carnival model of leaving town once everyone is wise to us.
      • HP consumer devices used to be solid. At home, we've got a 10-year-old consumer laser printer that we're still using (on those rare occasions we need to print).

        Plus, at work, we've had good luck their non-consumer tier. We still have a few 20+ year old 4050N's chugging along in a handful of faculty offices, and a bunch of their workgroup printers (all probably ~ 10 years old) that've been mostly trouble-free. Not to mention some old HP (and Aruba) switches we've still got at the top of some of our server ra

        • We have 4201DNs and they are shit. They have to be power cycled every other day or so or they start silently eating print jobs. The toner carts are miniscule. HP's quality is just depressing compared to the old days.

    • But they agreed to buy HP printers. Suckers!

      Granted this thread is about inkjet printers, but I've had an HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M477fdw since 2017 and it's great -- as have been all the HP laser printers I've used at my various jobs over the past 30+ years. Just sayin' your dig probably isn't universally applicable ...

      • by Nebulo ( 29412 )

        Your objection to his comment has proven his point. :) New HP printers? Crap. OLD HP laser printers? Extraordinarily reliable equipment that will outlast us all. If you're in the market for a low-volume laser printer, an old HP laser is often an excellent choice due to its reliability and cheap supplies.

  • I've tried 3rd party inks in Epson printers and in no time at all the print heads get clogged. Then I use a ton of the 3rd party ink trying (usually without success) to clear the clog via the "clean print heads" procedure. Ultimately I end up replacing the printer when I can't get it to print right again.

    • by aRTeeNLCH ( 6256058 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:08PM (#64389466)
      Why get 3rd party ink when Epson ink tank printers have dead cheap ink bottles? Sure, the devices are more expensive, but that's because that way they don't have to recover the cost of the printer through the ink.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by magzteel ( 5013587 )

        Why get 3rd party ink when Epson ink tank printers have dead cheap ink bottles? Sure, the devices are more expensive, but that's because that way they don't have to recover the cost of the printer through the ink.

        The price delta for the EcoTank printer with the same features as my regular one is usually close to $300. The break-even on that for me is probably over two years, so I'm just pre-paying for the ink. In addition the printers have a 2 year warranty. The only way I come out ahead is if the printer lasts longer than 2 years and I do a lot of printing.

        • Good point, I actually got my Epson 8550 ET when after 4 years my previous Epson had the heads clog up badly. It hadn't been used for some time, which mentioned when returning under extended warranty (5 years total instead of the regular 2 10 % of the printer purchasing price, about 30 bucks), but they gave me the full value as a credit. Which I then used to get the 8550. As for getting the value out, where I live, A3 photo prints are easily 15 bucks, whereas it costs me about 2, on Epson archival paper.
        • Really? My Epson EcoTank ET-3850 including a two year supply of ink cost $246.09.on Amazon. It's a copier and a scanner and it includes Wireless and Ethernet.

          • Really? My Epson EcoTank ET-3850 including a two year supply of ink cost $246.09.on Amazon. It's a copier and a scanner and it includes Wireless and Ethernet.

            Right now it's $329 on Amazon but it doesn't do automatic double side scanning and copying. For that you need to step up to the ET-5800 which is $770 on Amazon.

    • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:18PM (#64389480) Journal

      Buy from a reputable source. Just because you don't like paying the extortionary prices for official HP ink and supporting their bullshit business model, doesn't mean you must, or should, buy the cheapest shit you can find off eBay or a random vendor at a convention.

      At the very least buy from an established business that has a refund policy and customer service to complain to...
      =Smidge=

    • While it may be true that 3rd party inks don't works as well, I want the ability to choose them if that risk is acceptable to me.

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @11:50AM (#64389430) Homepage

    ...are quite obviously illegal. Someone like the EFF needs to puck a representative case and carry it through the courts.

    Case n point: our car periodically displays a new T&C. You can review it, sure, literally no one will do that. And then? What is supposed to happen if you click "no"? We never agreed to any T&C - we just signed a purchase contract, one page, no fine print.

    • by dnaumov ( 453672 )

      ...are quite obviously illegal.

      So quite obviously illegal... everybody is doing it all the time and absolutely NOTHING happens to them. Interesting illegality, that.

    • They may not be right, but the fact that they've existed for as long as they have is evidence that they are not illegal. As for your car or any other thing which updates the T&C, I'm sure there's a clause buried in there that says you don't have to click anything, that if you reject the terms you need to discontinue use of the product. By continuing to use the product you've given your implicit consent to the T&C.

      I'd love to see this kind of bullshit struck down in court someday, but I'm not holdi

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @11:51AM (#64389432) Homepage Journal

    We can now tap the perpetual energy source of Bill Hewlett and David Packard spinning in their graves.

    Thanks so f***ing much, Carly and successors.

    • We can now tap the perpetual energy source of Bill Hewlett and David Packard spinning in their graves.

      Thanks so f***ing much, Carly and successors.

      Carly has shareholders to answer to ... along with a Golden Parachute Exit Payment to keep funding. Whataddya expect?

  • Two words -- (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @11:54AM (#64389436)
    Brother and Laser.
    • Laser doesnâ(TM)t do anything for you in this case - HP did it to their laser printers too. But yeh, Brother or Canon are solutions to this problem.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Canon refuses to make drivers for latest windows so that you are forced to buy a new printer Brother doesn't do that

    • My Samsung black and white laser printer still works after almost 20 years (some paper roller guides inside get stuck sometimes).
      But the best part is that a laser cartridge practically doesn't expire. You might have to shake it a little if it has been sitting for some time and put it back in.
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Which all in one color laser are the best? Are https://www.costco.com/Catalog... [costco.com] considered good?

    • Some recent Brother laser printers have instituted toner DRM, so they have begun the process of becoming HP.

  • by ole_timer ( 4293573 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:01PM (#64389452)
    I have a canon ink tank printer - it's fantastic, works with all my windows, linux, and mac laptops
    • If you do enough printing to justify using that much ink, then that's a completely valid way to solve the problem. The market that's not well served is super small volume color, where someone occasionally prints a flyer or a card. Those people arguably should pay for prints, and only do proof prints at home on B&W personal laser, but many people don't want the hassle of printing somewhere that's not at home.

  • by LainTouko ( 926420 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:01PM (#64389454)
    Damaging the property of other people for your own financial benefit needs a police response. Legal action should not be necessary.
    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      It's not clear that using 3rd party ink broke the printer, only that the printer refused to print with the 3rd party ink installed. It's similar to the way videogame consoles refuse to run homebrew.

      This is why we need laws that prohibit such arbitrary restrictions.

  • Oh Brother. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hsthompson69 ( 1674722 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:08PM (#64389468)

    I still remember my HP LaserJet 4P - lasted for decades, but finally just had too many problems with OOM errors (even after upgrading ram).

    Gave up my HP last year, and went for Brother. They don't make me feel like I'm a young girl on Epstein island.

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      I had a 4L. Since then, it has been Epson and Brother. I avoided Lexmark because they tried this same BS a while ago.

      • Re:Oh Brother. (Score:4, Interesting)

        by CrankyFool ( 680025 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:42PM (#64389556)
        Heheh. I finally, two weeks ago, upgraded my parents' printer -- about 20 years ago I had given them an HP Laserjet 4000TN that I had gotten for free from work (because 20 years ago they were already wildly out of date). The 4000TN's worked reasonably well for them all this time, but finally was having some performance issues (some jams, but also problems with bigger docs) and they were tired of having two devices -- the 4000TN for printing B&W, and their canon inkjet that had stopped printing a long time ago they were only using for scanning -- so we upgraded to a Brother color laser MFC. I did literally throw away the 4000TN, but this -- probably close to 30 years old -- printer was still basically working.
    • Yup. About fifteen years ago, I was out of ink... I think I had an Epson at the time... and the combined cost of both the black and color cartridges was over $100. There was a Brother laser printer on sale for $50. After about a minute of thinking about how often I really *needed* to print in color, I put the ink cartridges back and bought the laser. The low-volume *starter* toner lasted me about a year!

      I eventually gave it to a friend... who is still using it... when I upgraded to a multifunction, also

      • by sconeu ( 64226 )

        Yeah, I decided to screw it with the ink replacements, and switched to a Samsung ML-1710.

        I then wanted duplex, so, remembering how well I liked the Brother at a previous job, went with an HL-2270dw. And then later added a DCP series multifunction laser for scanning purposes.

        Brother is great.

      • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

        The low-volume *starter* toner lasted me about a year!

        LOL, that was a rare deal and I'm impressed that worked out for you. I've seen people throw out inkjet printers and just buy new ones every time instead of buying ink cartridges, only to find that the cartridge that came with the unit lasted for about 50 pages. This is a lose-lose situation since the printers are loss-leaders: the manufacturer sold the printer at a loss hoping to make money back on cartridge sales, so they lost money. The customer wasted money because buying the printer didn't actually g

        • I have a Brother B&W laser PSC. I have had it for a couple of years now and I too am still on the starter toner. This unit is also old enough to have no toner DRM (some recent Brother printers have it, unfortunately) so I can run refills; I can literally trade the starter toner in on getting a full cart.

          GP is talking about toner and you are talking about ink, as well.

          • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

            GP is talking about toner and you are talking about ink, as well.

            I figured they skimped on both when providing the ones that come with the printer. Is that not the case?

            This unit is also old enough to have no toner DRM (some recent Brother printers have it, unfortunately)

            Dangit! I thought this stuff was struck down by the courts! I didn't realize any of the major manufacturers were still doing this. grrrrrrrrr.....

    • Re:Oh Brother. (Score:5, Informative)

      by TwistedGreen ( 80055 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @03:20PM (#64390054)

      I have a Brother as well. It's just a black-and-white laser printer, but it's the best device purchase ever. Very reliable. I've been using it for 12 years with no issues. They've even kept the drivers supported through Windows 7, 8, 10, and 11. They're a great example of how a company should treat its customers.

  • by aRTeeNLCH ( 6256058 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:14PM (#64389470)
    Sure, brother and laser as many here say whenever HP printers come up, but if you want to print your own photos, I find Epson ink tank printers great. I've got the 8550 A3+ that prints photos for cents on A4 in great quality with lasting colours. Note that Epson have always had great Linux compatibility (no support, but it all works and they provide drivers for the scanners printers and such, some things don't need drivers, but they provide them, including their own Linux scanning app), a domain where canon is hit and miss.
  • When (or what model...) was the last model HP you ran across in your career, that didn't suck outright?
    I remember their original HP Inkjet 500 that damn near took 2 people to move and just worked. But beyond that? Possibly my LaserJet 1320dn that doesn't GaF about what toner I give it.

    • When (or what model...) was the last model HP you ran across in your career, that didn't suck outright?

      Don't bring their laptops into this!

    • A Laserjet 2300DN was the last one I installed that didn't suck, and the next to the last HP I ever installed. That printer lasted over a decade.

      A year or so later, I installed a 2400DN at the same client. It lasted a bit more than a year, just long enough for the warranty to expire. I never installed another HP.

    • by Cyberax ( 705495 )
      Software in HP inkjets was probably written by junkies high on HP printer ink. I can't imagine how they can make it more dysfunctional.

      But at the same time, the print quality is amazing.
    • The last non-shit HP I am aware of was the 4050. It had good performance (17 ppm @ 600 dpi), a reasonable interface on the printer itself, and perhaps most importantly it was feasible to maintain it. I put a rebuild kit in a 2100TN once and it was a super PITA. It was just too small to make it easy to rebuild. Unfortunately the jetdirect cards of the era have unpatched insecurities, and HP abandoned them, so you should only use them with an external print server. Luckily there are now lots of small cheap op

  • by MindPrison ( 864299 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:23PM (#64389498) Journal

    I work in security, but my daily work is also amongst people in a factory.

    And it's kind of a hostage situation, we have perhaps 300 printers mostly HP, and we were used to use re-ink, inkservice etc. to keep costs low, because HP charges exorbant prices for toners that are done in days, we're talking desktop printers where it's eating toners like it was food.

    And these can cost 400$ each, and we spend 100K's in a few months, and it's a hostage situation to be forced to buy original toners, because the factory can't afford changing all the printers, neither can the IT infrastructure with our print servers and drivers, it cost too much to change all that.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      If you have 300 printers in the office and are managing the toner levels yourself then you're doing it very wrong. Breakeven point for having a managed printing contract is well in the low double digits. You're time is not free (unless you're a volunteer and don't actually get paid to be at work) and you most likely have better things to do.

      • I agree completely.

        My organisation has for the second time tried to negotiate a printer management deal with a huge printing company, but it failed due to money constraints, again...

        And yes, it's very stressful for me to manage so many jobs, our IT team is hard pressed, we manage our own old now aging server parks and datacentre, it's crazy hard work and we're all a bit overworked. It works - but it's hard.

  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:24PM (#64389500)

    From time to time I still need to print source code so I have an Okidata Microline 321 Turbo wide carriage printer for the win. I also have an 80 column IBM Pro Printer that is still going strong. When you need dead simple text printouts you can't beat the good old dot matrix. You can still easily get ribbons for these guys too. I'll never use an ink jet type printer again. If you need color or fine pitched black and white it's the laser printer all the way.

    • Depends on the DESIGN of your laser printer! Some are engineered to break in certain ways and if you are lucky it's at an interval but others just die once. Laser printers are quite complex devices which helps them hide the "errors" in the breakage.

      Color laser printers have a different more complex design than simply a large box with 4 printers inside; they'll merge 4 fusers into one and have a delicate powder transfer belt to leak and needing foam seals... and choosing foam that deteriorates by age (seen

      • The old Xerox Phaser is the best color printer ever

        I worked on a military installation once in the late 90's that had a Tektronix Phaser (model 340 I think???) before the Xerox sale. I was told it was purchased for around $7k, and I think that's the only reason they bought it. To tell people it cost $7k.

      • "Some are engineered to break in certain ways"

        Highly doubtful. There are lots of angles to planned obsolescence... part availability... non-serviceable parts... driver discontinuance... O/S support retirement... even the discontinuation of consumables. But engineering consumer electronics products to actually break after a predetermined period - presumably after the warranty and not before - is hard. For fly-by-night chinese rebadge brands, the cost to engineer it would be more than the product is worth, a

    • by kackle ( 910159 )
      My work was tossing a dot-matrix Epson, so I sold on eBay for cheap. I saw in its user manual that some of those ribbon cartridges are re-inkable(!) by buying generic ink from an office store and refilling it through a port hole in the cartridge.
      • Back in the day you could buy ribbon re-inking machines. I had a friend that had one. You had to remove the ribbon from the cartridge and run it through the machine which would moisten it back up. Then a sponge in the cartridge needed wetting too. It worked well but the ribbons would start to tear through after a few re-inkings. Still saved money though.

    • Oh, but the noise. That shit's grating to the ears.

  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @12:27PM (#64389508) Homepage

    I have been seeing this same story repeat in various forms since before the year started with the number two. I don't understand why this keeps coming up. Lexmark tried putting chips in their ink/toner in 2003 [slashdot.org] and lost that case [slashdot.org] even up to the supreme court [slashdot.org]. The Magnuson-Moss warranty act [wikipedia.org] was passed in 1975 and was intended to prevent this kind of shenanigans. Obviously at the time nobody was putting computer chips into vacuum cleaner bags, but it is the same spirit.

    This just should not be a discussion any longer! Settled! Done! Kaput! Go away!

    • The Magnuson-Moss warranty act was passed in 1975 and was intended to prevent this kind of shenanigans.

      Magnuson-Moss only prevents them from cancelling your warranty for using compatible third party parts or supplies, it doesn't prevent using DRM to prevent you from using third party replacement supplies. DRM didn't really exist yet, and they weren't looking forward, but rather at the past and present. Lots of printers have DRM now. Even Brother has reportedly started using DRM on toner.

  • I never agreed to be subjected to the last two decades of stories about idiots buying HP printers and whining about their problems.

  • The first comments - do you actually work for HP? I mean, are you being paid to post this crap?

    The printers never used to have this issue - this is the *same* thing as Boeing, and so many others - business MBA who want to report ROI, never mind making actual products that people want to use.

    And the price the OEMs charge for ink and toner is significantly higher than gold.

    Fortunately, the third party supplier I was buying from at work, and that I now buy from at home (tonerprice.com), the ink and toner works

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday April 12, 2024 @01:31PM (#64389736) Journal

    I mean, HP's predatory ink bullshit is long since proved, nobody doing the faintest amount of research wouldn't find it.

    This isn't exonerating HPs nonsense, I'd love to see them get their comeuppance.

    But seriously: STOP BUYING HP SHIT. Not just printers, ALL OF IT.
    Until *consumers* punish them for their choices, why should they change? Do you think a huge corporation feels guilt?

    • How many printers are bought by end users, versus those bought by IT departments or 'managed service providers', for whom the cost of toner is not an issue because THEY are not paying for it?

      Just like when Microsoft realized their real customer was corporate IT and reworked Windows to provide corporate IT with maximum control, HP realized who they need to keep happy. And it's not you or me (unless you're a CIO/owner of an IT service company.)

  • by HiThere ( 15173 ) <charleshixsn@ear ... .net minus punct> on Friday April 12, 2024 @01:36PM (#64389754)

    I never agreed to allow my printer to connect to the internet. Even though I always used HP ink (I don't print that much), my printer still shut down, because I wouldn't allow it connection to the internet.

    HP has become garbage.

    • I manged almost 25yrs working for HP. Stayed with their printers for about 12 years after I retired....

      Last year I abandoned them as printer supplier. When my 4yr old HP MFP's print head died, and the replacement head (still available) was almost twice the price of the printer, I decided to call it quits. I didn't mind the ink price .. only printed infrequently ... but spare parts prices really get me.

      I'm on a Canon these days. The interface if poor, and the s/w minimal, but ... so far ... so good. ;-)

  • Last year I installed a Xerox laser printer that a client had purchased, which included legal language when both opening the contents and installing drivers that wanted my agreement to only use Xerox brand toner and supplies in it.
  • If your motorcycle upgraded its firmware, and told it can only run on Shell gasoline

    If your Samsung phone updated so you could only charge it with a Samsung-built charger

    If your car updated to only start if it had Michelin tires

    If your laundry machine stopped working unless it had Tide detergent in it

    If your electric toothbrush stopped working unless it had Colgate toothpaste

    If your coffeemaker only worked with Nescafé coffee

    If your flashlight only worked with Energizer batteries

    If your mechanica

  • The HP DeskJet series of printers were cheap and good back in the 500 series...
    Today, we only buy printers that are cheap and are advertised as working with 3rd party inks at stores. HP will never again get a dollar from me.

    I don't get why people are complaining. Just don't buy their products.

  • Recently picked up a Brother HL-2270DW with 60% left on the toner for $8 from a local second hand store. Should be good for ~7k pages. HP is the worst and their inkjets are the worst of the worst. Don't do it.

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

Working...