A Boston man has filed a class-action lawsuit accusing hardware maker HP and office supply retailer Staples of colluding to inflate the price of printer ink cartridges in violation of federal antitrust law. According to the suit, HP allegedly paid Staples $100 million to refrain from selling inexpensive third-party ink cartridges...I can vouch for the latter allegation, based on my experiences with Epson and HP printers. But the problem with a class action lawsuit is that even when successful the bulk of the penalty $ goes to the attorneys, not the consumers.
Everyone knows that printer ink is a swindle: they sell you the printer cheaply, then sell the colors — unremarkable commodities, let us not forget — at prices that would make a perfumer blush.
The companies have also turned to using the ink equivalent of DRM, the use of microchips embedded in ink cartridges that work with a corresponding technical mechanism in the printer that blocks the use of unauthorized third-party ink. Adding insult to injury, most printers are lying, filthy ink thieves, according to a recent study, misreporting that they are low on ink when they are not.
19 January 2009
Printer ink costs $8,000 per gallon
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That's not really the point, if they win then hopefully the problem will be fixed. I'd rather get cheaper ink cartriges for the next couple decades than a small sum of money from a one-time lawsuit.
ReplyDeleteI agree.
ReplyDeletethese are what you call "disposable printers" when out of ink, just buy another printer, bic should be in on this one.
ReplyDeleteOK, so don't any of them make ink affordable? How about the new Kodak printer? Will it work with Airport Express? So many unanswered questions but isn't this what we all want to know?
ReplyDelete