I haven't kept up with the John Deere issue so I'm not sure if they still do that. I can't find any current news articles about hacking JD's, so either the affected farmers have switched to other equipment manufacturers, or JD backed off.
Last updated 2018:
JD press release excerpt said:
"Software modifications increase the risk that equipment will not function as designed," the company continued. "As a result, allowing unqualified individuals to modify equipment software can endanger machine performance, in addition to Deere customers, dealers and others, resulting in equipment that no longer complies with industry and safety/environmental regulations."
No, it doesn't really pass the smell test. But only because their statements don't actually tell you anything. Do they imply that customer safety would be endangered? The wording is not clear what the scope of the problem could be.
AH,
Are you saying the same game has been played on the <30HP tractors, too? I've only heard and read about the very large agricultural tractors affected this way.
There's a lot I don't know about the tractors that could make a difference how JD is playing this.
What kind of engine ECU/emission control do they use?
What is its legal/environmental purpose?
What rules apply to the modification or protection of the ECU settings?
How do these rules change from country to country?
How elaborate is the GPS guidance package on these tractors?
Are other functions under computer control or safety lockout, such as implement operations, power take-off?
Does hacking one part (engine parameters) adversely affect other functions (guidance, implement safety, etc.)?
My first impression comes from my own experience playing around with CANBUS outputs from my own cars with a hand-held reader. This may or may not be applicable to the JD equipment situation. I'm not a tractor mechanic. My own tractor is much more similar to Alistair's - except from Japan not Czech.
I don't have enough knowledge of how modern large agricultural tractors work to understand how complex the software is, and what the consequences of altering the software could be.
All I know is that the farmers are PO'd and they believe that JD (and the dealers) have leveraged the situation for profit.