Epson’s bricked printers highlight the industry’s reparability problem
Epson printers have had a nasty little issue for years. Some models will abruptly brick, even if they seem to be working fine, because the ink pads are supposedly too saturated. Epson has endured bad publicity the past few weeks as users, websites, and right-to-repair activists condemned the company for designing its printers to eventually stop functioning, highlighting just how big of a problem printers continue to be in the fight for the right to repair.
According to the Fight to Repair newsletter, Epson printers—including the L360, L130, L220, L310, L365, and potentially others—may suddenly display a message saying that they have reached the end of their service life and then stop printing. Epson told The Verge this week that this is because saturated ink pads could leak ink throughout the devices.
The issue has been ongoing for years, and there are multiple videos instructing people how to fix the ink pads. In late July, however, the issue hit Twitter, as spotted by Gizmodo this week, putting fresh attention on Epson's printer bricking and leading to allegations of planned obsolescence.