The agency filed suit against Deere over its software repair tool, only available to authorized repair shops, which has led to higher repair costs for users.
Over the last decade we have brought you frequent reports not from the coolest of hackerspaces or the most bleeding edge of engineering in California or China, but from the rolling prairies of the
The FTC is suing Deere & Company for allegedly holding a “monopoly” on repair tools necessary for fully functioning repairs on Deere agricultural equipment.
The Right to Repair lawsuit carries significant implications for farmers, independent repair access and antitrust enforcement. Here's what an antitrust attorney and a D.C. lobbyist have to say about the legal action.
In its final days, the Biden administration sued John Deere over repair restrictions, calling them “unfair corporate tactics” that hurt farmers.
The Federal Trade Commission and the Illinois and Minnesota Attorneys General announced a lawsuit against agricultural equipment manufacturer John Deere over its practices that have allegedly increased equipment repair costs for farmers and deprived them of the ability to make timely repairs on critical farming equipment.
Advocates for farmers say equipment repair delays could be costly for farmers with seeding and harvesting deadlines. The company called the suit "baseless."
The FDA recently approved a bioengineered blood vessel, which becomes part of a patient’s body over time. It’s designed to help treat victims of traumatic injuries.
Farmers in North Dakota and the rest of the country are monitoring an evolving legal case against a giant equipment manufacturer, and they said repair restrictions are not the only service headaches farmers encounter.
Deere & Co. asserted the FTC ignored the company's “long-standing ... still lacked basic information about the industry and John Deere’s business practices and confirmed that the agency ...
In a redacted version of the complaint posted by the FTC, the lawsuit says Deere provides ... basic information about the industry and John Deere's business practices and confirmed that the ...
Lee Zeldin, President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, is poised to spearhead a sweeping rollback of regulations related to meatpacking plant pollution, fertilizer chemicals and a wide range of other agriculture-related environmental standards.