(crossposted from !forced_obsolescence@slrpnk.net (https://slrpnk.net/post/26435334), which focuses on varieties of enshitification specifically related to artificial aging of tech. It doubles as an asshole design thus also crossposted to !asshole_crappy_design@slrpnk.net)

A Transcend Storejet external HDD has this software:

  • RecoveRx_v2.6.zip
  • RecoveRx_Win_4.3_setup.exe
  • SecureEraseTool_Win_v1.10_setup.exe
  • TranscendElite_Win_v4.28_setup.exe

I am offline, so I went to a public library to fetch the above files. Early in the installation process the piece of shit tries to connect to the Internet and craps out when it discovers there is no Internet connection. WTF?

It’s a nasty trend. I’ve seen other drivers and various hardware support tools pull this shit in recent years.

Is it legal? Seems questionable considering:

  • They use deception. The packaging for the harddrive probably does not have an “Internet required” disclosure, nor would any reasonable buyer expect Internet to be required to use a hard drive. Then they use deception again when you download the tools. I am led to believe I am downloading a “SecureEraseTool” and a “TranscendElite” software package, but in fact these are just proprietary download managers pretending to be tools.
  • (GDPR regions) By forcing you to needlessly access the cloud with their proprietary tool, they collect your IP address and whatever else that download manager collects to share with them. This does not seem compliant with data minimization.
Tech discussion unrelated to the forum topic

Why are those tools needed (you might wonder). The drive is in a shitty state. It’s in a usb3 enclosure and was usb-attached to 3 different machines:

  • linux laptop with usb3 expresscard, attached both with and without supplemental power. The drive spins, LED on the enclosure blinks rapidly, it gets a device handle and /var/log/kern.log shows it was detected okay. Running fdisk on the unmounted drive just hangs for ~10—15′ before timing out. Reattaching and trying to mount it also causes a long ~10—15′ hang before it gives up.
  • win7 one two different machines: spins forever, LED blinking rapidly. Windows never gives up and it never gets recognized or mounted.

So I wanted to first try the official tools to see how they react to the drive. Since they turned out to be a piece of shit, I will probably try next:

  • Remove the drive from the enclosure and attaching directly to a real SATA bus (not one of those shitty SATA-USB adapters and not a SATA-PATA drive bay adapter, even though those would be easier. I will put it on a proper SATA bus because the SMART diag stuff is often crippled when going over a bus adapter of some kind.
  • Run the DOS Ultimate Boot CD, which (IIRC) is still the king of disk diagnostic tools.
  • See what smartctl does.
  • Try zero-filling with dd

⚠ Avoid Transcend products for being anti-consumer

Anyway, the main point of this thread is to expose the shit Transcend pulls by shipping download managers that masquerade as tools. It’s a shitty practice because:

  • The tools are forever dependent on the supplier keeping a host running. Not only to snoop on you but so to do a sneaky form of designed obsolescence. When your drive model is old enough to need the tools, that is when they will pull the plug. You only think you have the software, until it’s game over. You lose autonomy and control over your own product without knowing it.
  • Discriminates against offline people.
  • Discriminates against tech illiterates, who rely on the easy tools and cannot handle tools like dd, smartctl, and UBCD.
  • Assaults right to repair. No right to repair laws are good enough to think of this kind of dark pattern.
  • Obsolescence by design. If you cannot install the tools you need to keep the device running, they are effectively bullying you into buying your way out of the problem.
  • qupada@fedia.io
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    21 hours ago

    You’re missing one massive issue here, which is that - irrespective of the version you think you downloaded - they can use this tactic to force the latest version to be installed instead.

    Need an older version, because they broke a feature, changed the license terms, made something that was previous free paid-for, or otherwise? Too bad. That installer is only ever going to do one thing, and it’s the newest version (if, as you say, it continues to work at all).

    • activistPnk@slrpnk.netOP
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      3 hours ago

      You’re missing one massive issue here, which is that - irrespective of the version you think you downloaded - they can use this tactic to force the latest version to be installed instead.

      What do you mean: missing? Denying people control over their software and versions is of course an obvious and inherent facet to the problem.

      Need an older version, because they broke a feature, changed the license terms, made something that was previous free paid-for, or otherwise? Too bad. That installer is only ever going to do one thing, and it’s the newest version (if, as you say, it continues to work at all).

      Or worse, no version at all. Or a broken version (all software has bugs and that includes updates).

      The HP shit-show

      HP controls what inks you use to the extent of sabotaging your printer “for your protection” in an automated firmware update.

      The TomTom shit-show

      If you install the PC desktop tool for managing your TomTom from the CD that comes with your TomTom, it forces a check to ensure that you’re installing the latest (Internet required, despite this not being mentioned on the packaging). When you allow it to connect to the WAN, it discovers that there is a later version and it blocks you from installing the original version. When you run the latest version (your only choice), it then says “your device is no longer supported”, and refuses to load any maps (even original maps) onto old TomToms. My local flee market is trying to sell a huge box of old TomToms, two for a dollar, because of this shit.

      🞜

      I will not buy Amazon, HP, or TomTom products for these reasons (among many other reasons). Now I have added Transcend to the list.