The problem stems from the limited field of (realistic) competitors - you don't really have all that many alternatives in the console market if you want to "stick it to Microsoft" for pulling this stunt. And since this is
not a design decision integral to the console itself, but rather an update to existing products that before this worked with 3rd party storage devices just fine, it's rather hard to vote with your wallet when you've already purchased the bloody system, now isn't it?
As for why this is such a bad thing, I shall employ the following analogy: Imagine you just bought a table for your kitchen. You paid cash, so there is no question about ownership, and the table is therefore definitively yours. Now imagine you decide to airbrush a life-sized naked woman onto it. Under no circumstances could the table's manufacturer
stop you from doing this, even if it's a clear violation of how they envisioned their products being used, because you own the bloody table now and it's yours to do with as you see fit.
Microsoft dictating what you can no longer do with hardware you have purchased, in a transparent money grab at that, is no less ridiculous than the manufacturer of your couch mandating you use only approved footwear (which only they make and you'll pay through the nose for it) whilst 'interfacing' with it, because 3rd party foot coverings could potentially scuff up the leather(oh noes!).
The idea that hardware manufacturers should be allowed to control how that hardware is used once it enters the consumer's hands is a pernicious and
insidious one, and while the examples above are absolutely ridiculous and meant only to showcase how illogical the entire concept is, imagine if say... auto manufacturers could mandate that only 1st party replacement parts could be installed?
I think you can see now why it's best we nip this trend in the bud.
scotth266 said:
All the article says is that they're killing "unauthorized" units. As in, shit that's been modded.
I don't see how that equates to "3rd party units", which are an entirely different matter.
(Strangely, the only XBL user in the first two pages who noticed this was named procrastubator.)
That's not what that means at all - it's a move to kill sales of storage devices that are not manufactured by Microsoft or 'licensed' by Microsoft (read: Microsoft takes a chunk of their profits), a transparent money grab justified entirely by the sentence
"We like money and screw you". USB storage devices are a bloody industry standard and plugging one into your console to copy data onto it is
not modding. Installing a superior price/GB hard-drive instead of the over-priced POS drives Microsoft sells is also not really much of a mod, in that the system
is designed to accommodate hard drives and
having a bigger one does not in any way give you some unfair advantage during online gaming.
This. Is. About. The. Money. End of story.