Tesla will sue you for $50,000 if you try to resell your Cybertruck in the first year::Tesla may agree to buy the truck back at the original price minus “$0.25/mile driven” and any damages and repairs.
Tesla will sue you for $50,000 if you try to resell your Cybertruck in the first year::Tesla may agree to buy the truck back at the original price minus “$0.25/mile driven” and any damages and repairs.
How is this legal in the US given the first sale doctrine?
Ferrari has some similar bullshit, but you agree to it in a contract when you buy the car. If you refuse they simply don’t sell you the car.
(Ferrari chooses you, not the other way around)
How does Monsanto avoid this?
They sell you seeds. You can grow things with those seeds, but you cant plant the grown plants’ seeds.
In that case, it’s a patented product that happens to reproduce itself as part of its normal operation.
In this case, it’s just shitty business behavior.
(To be clear, no, living organisms should not be patentable. But it’d be fucking hilarious if patented genes went feral.)
On the plus side, some of those patents have already expired.
It’s even worse than that. You can buy seeds from the market place have no agreement with Monsanto but can’t plant those seeds.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowman_v._Monsanto_Co.