significant economic harm to our company
Oh! I have a solution! Make it a local API you fucking goofs.
significant economic harm to our company
Oh! I have a solution! Make it a local API you fucking goofs.
I went with Daikin 'cause they had local control.... Except that they changed it in the meantime, and I had 2 different AC splits connected to the pump, one of them is older and still has local control, while the other is newer and doesn't. Fuck all of them.
You can make a thermostat with a raspberry pi, a few sensors, and a relay board. They're pretty simple devices.
Really, you don't even need a pi. An ESP8266 would be more than sufficient.
Source: I made my own thermostat from an esp8266, some sensors, and a relay board.
I did that, for my gas heater.
AC is more complex, it has fan speed, air direction (2 of them), temperature settings and so on. I solved with an IR blaster, but that's not what I wanted, I specifically selected this brand to have local control via wifi.
Nah, I'd rather data get sent out to external servers and then come back. This is efficient and very smart.
Forked, and mirrored to my Forgejo server. As someone else pointed out on a different community, this is a great example of the Barbra Streisand effect in action.
People like me, without Haier appliances, are now aware of this fuckwittery, and have actively taken steps to preserve the code, before it gets taken down.
Dickheads.
Seconded, and added Haier to my mental list of companies to never buy from.
Had a nice TV from that company. It was really long ago, though, and the terribly bright blue indicator of it being on I didn't like, especially when using as a PC monitor.
And, since we don't own or use any Haier appliances, we aren't subject to their TOS.
When companies build shitty software for which they charge arms and legs extra and are pissed that someone found their way around it
Translation: our legal team has to justify their employment, thus we're threatening non-profit open source projects that can't fight back and pose no harm whatsoever to the company's financials, market position, customers, or any other stakeholder.
It'd be awesome if the maintainers could get a pro bono advice / representation here to make a proper response. They're volunteering their free time improving an extensive list of crappy products of a brand and this is what they get back? Disgusting move from Haier.
EFF.org would have lawyers, that I hope would take up the case to help the original repo maintainer out..
Bit of a tangent, but I hear Haier's legal department can be reached at cybergovernance@haier-europe.com, if anyone has any questions about the legal grounds they're claiming, I'm sure they'd be happy to elaborate - they clearly have plenty of free time on their hands.
Seems like I dodged a bullet by recently deciding for another company. Definitely on my permanent do-not-buy list now, thanks for letting us know that you do not want any customers, Haier đŸ˜‘
Do you use any smart home solution with your AC? Maybe even Home Assistant? Just curious
Not the person you asked, but i have a mitsubishi electric heatpump, which i have hooked up to homeassistant via an esphome library. It has a header on the controller board that you can connect to.
Normally the header is for their $200 controller and app, i spent $10 on the parts.
https://github.com/geoffdavis/esphome-mitsubishiheatpump
I think i better start mirroring the repo...
That's amazing. I love such open source projects! I love the Lemmy, Home Assistant and Open Source community.
I did the same thing for Panasonic ACs if anybody wants to get rid of the cloud: https://github.com/DomiStyle/esphome-panasonic-ac
I'm running a Venstar Colortouch thermostat. They're not cheap, but they have a local API and there's a Homeassistant integration.
I have a Lennox multistage system with a heat pump, and furnace for when it gets too cold. The best way to run those (according to the installer) is at a low level all the time. So it doesn't benefit much from things like location tracking to turn the system up or down while we're out. Especially since I work from home.
What it does do is make graphs for tracking how it runs the heat pump and furnace each day.
Wouldn't be a bad idea for potential customers to write Haier and let them know they're on a personal blacklist.
Is there an OSS-hostile list, like the opposite of the Awesome-XYZ lists?
Someone really should maintain a list like that, hosted on multiple non big tech git hosts.
This recent Anti-FOSS propaganda needs to stop
I always thought about why don't FOSS projects that are at risk of getting sued by big corp like (NewPipe, Popcorn Time, streamio, tachiyomi ....) embrace the dark web or git over torrent via VPN, so their projects don't get threatened with take downs. z-library ended having to move to the dark web after all.
You get unknown I guess. People move to Github to get a chance of contributions
@erranto @Dehydrated z library, pdfdrive, piratebay
Anna’s Archive is probably the best source for books. I use it all the time, actually, I even use it right now. It's also great for students who need textbooks. Fuck Pearson and those other scammers!
pdfdrive Thanks for the suggestion, is it any better than z-library or do they host the same content ?
Most ppl don't think about that or don't know that their project will take off. And then it is already too late.
Don't ever buy anything from these people, got it.
How is the plugin illegal?
It's not like a judge said it's illegal... what happened is that a huge multinational company sent a menacing letter to a developer regarding their hobby project, and the developer —understandably— decided to comply.
Yeah, even though the claim is 1000% horseshit, it’s not like some small time python dad has the means to defend against a giant multinational in court.
Laws are only for the common man.
The developer has not yet fully complied - the repo is still up, they have legal insurance and are in discussion with lawyers, and they have responded requesting clarification on the specifics of their alleged "violation".
In the mean time, I think many people have reached out to Haier to express their displeasure. On an unrelated note, the original menacing letter came from cybergovernance@haier-europe.com in case anyone was curious.
Ask those brain dead fucks at Haier
It sounds like someone out of their jurisdiction should host the repos and tell them to pound sand.
How many GBs do these ACs upload to the company's cloud?
Too many probably
That ended up being a router error. It was actually something like 1mb.
Another one to the boycott list
From what I read, this project does help integrate with HA to avoid using the Haier app, but still uses Haier's cloud. Can anyone confirm if this was true?
Based on the documentation on the GitHub, it looks like it does use Haier's cloud. Which, doesn't make Haier's actions any less shitty, but I can understand a company not wanting a bunch of users using their undocumented API, especially if there's potential to have automations hitting it more frequently than their own app does (not that I have any reason to believe this project was actually being inefficient with API calls).
EDIT: sorry, I read it wrong, I thought the reply says the addon "doesn't" use the remote API.
I digged a bit on the code, and every command indeed go through the cloud. So even if you use this addon, Haire can still collect a fair bit of data about you, since there is no way to communicate locally and directly to the AC.
But the addon only sends the minimum amount of data to achieve functionality, so definitely not as much data as using Haire's app.
~~Can you link to where the documentation that specify they don't use API?~~
Because I am looking at pyhOn (dependency of hon, and also being taken down), it seems like when executing a command, they do contact the cloud. Specefically
url: str = f"{const.API_URL}/commands/v1/send"
async with self._hon.post(url, json=data) as response:
...
https://github.com/Andre0512/pyhOn/blob/327d4a181484d49ccbef25e470cfc86d2c5d91fa/pyhon/connection/api.py#L215 . The call to API is later used to send command:
result = await self.api.send_command(
self._appliance,
self._name,
params,
ancillary_params,
self._category_name,
)
And the API_URL
indeed points to a remote API:
API_URL = "https://api-iot.he.services"
https://github.com/Andre0512/pyhOn/blob/327d4a181484d49ccbef25e470cfc86d2c5d91fa/pyhon/const.py#L2
Well then I guess it is pretty obvious
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