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  • 2021-08-10 (xsd:date)
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  • Did the Company That Makes McFlurry Machines Get Hit with a Restraining Order? (en)
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  • A company that manufactures a device that diagnoses problems in McDonald's notoriously finicky McFlurry machines, Kytch, won a temporary restraining order in their lawsuit against Taylor, the company that exclusively manufactures those machines for the fast-food giant. As Gizmodo reported on Aug. 9, 2021, a judge awarded the order after Kytch had alleged in a complaint that the McFlurry machine manufacturer had gotten its hands on a Kytch Solution Devices with the express intention of learning its trade secrets. The case has been championed by right to repair advocates who oppose the practice of keeping repair information proprietary. An April 2021 feature in Wired that interviewed Kytch co-founder Jeremy O’Sullivan explained why McFlurry machines — which require secret codes to access diagnostic information — are an extreme example of keeping repair information proprietary: As a cheaper solution to the problem of chronically broken McFlurry makers, O'Sullivan and his partner Melissa Nelson began selling a machine named a Kytch Solution Device that, as described by Wired, hacks your hostile dairy extrusion appliance and offers access to its forbidden secrets. In filing for the restraining order, Kytch had alleged that Taylor had been in the process of creating its own version of the device. The order mandates that Taylor not use, copy, disclose, or otherwise make available in any way information, including formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or process obtained by any of the Kytch Solution Devices in their possession. While the case, described by Wired in April as a a two-year-long cold war ... that is only now turning hot, is far from over, the restraining order is an important victory for Kytch. As such, the claim presented in Gizmodo's headline that The McFlurry Machine Company Just Got Hit With a McRestraining Order, is True. (en)
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