• @[email protected]
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    808 months ago

    That’s the first thing I said when this was first posted, all those people who had the implants that enabled sight are left with no parts and no support since the company went under.

    There should be laws in place stating these companies will provide support and parts for the entire life of the users. Anything less is criminal.

    • @[email protected]
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      1068 months ago

      Better to mandate open hardware and software standards, so if the company goes under others can make parts or even upgrade the devices.

      • Juja
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        148 months ago

        Inching closer to cyberpunk every day

      • Jojo
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        148 months ago

        If nothing else, mandate the opening of the standards must coincide with the end of support. I realize it would mean a service blackout while another company tries to pick them up, but it would be a lot better than nothing and it doesn’t hit the bottom line if a company operating now quite so much which would make it more palatable.

    • @[email protected]
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      248 months ago

      I would add open plans and open source so that if anything happens with the company another company can come in and pick up support easily.

    • Solivine
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      8 months ago

      How do you go about enforcing this when the company goes under? (Almost like healthcare shouldn’t be private lol)

        • @[email protected]
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          78 months ago

          Doesn’t help if no one picks up the ball on manufacturing spare parts. Manufacturing medical devices is really expensive, even more so when you have to do small batches of niche hardware, and requires fairly special manufacturing capabilities so it’s not easily done by anyone.

    • @[email protected]
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      98 months ago

      Be careful what you ask for and how any laws are written. I knew a guy who became a paraplegic after a helicopter accident. He actually walked away from the accident but months/years later damage to his lower spine caused a blood clot that rendered him largely unable to use his legs.

      He was wheelchair-bound when I met him, but one day a few years down the line I walked into a room to find him standing & walking. He told me he had even been able to climb a ladder to replace a light bulb. He’d been on a medical trial that was clearly promising. Unfortunately side effects piled up, he had to stop the trial, and he again ended up in a wheelchair.

      Granted this wasn’t the same as a medical implant trial, but if strict laws are enacted that required companies to support medical devices, drugs, etc. then I’d be very afraid of the impact it would have on research and trials like these. No company is going to want to risk lawsuits, etc. so they’ll just stop innovating, or at least cut back a huge amount.

      • @[email protected]
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        98 months ago

        I work as a disability support worker, I have clients in wheelchairs and traveled the world with them doing sport. I am fully aware of what cutting edge tech can do to better lives, and I am even more aware of what the effects of not having access are.

        That said, your argument is nonsense. These companies have more money than they know what to do with, and the trials of these products in humans are intentionally small. They have an obligation to do no harm, and that includes supporting their patients til the end of life.

        If that requires slower trials, or special insurance the company pays to cover these things, or careful standardization so the torch can be passed on should the company go under, so be it.

        The people who got the ocular implants are going blind again one by one because the company that gave them vision went under. They cannot get support or parts.

        Can you imagine having your sight and therefore independence again, only to have the cold fear every night that you’ll wake up and your implant won’t be working?

        https://spectrum.ieee.org/bionic-eye-obsolete