
A 100-page report from Norway's Forbrukerrådet calls on the EU to enforce competition law and pass a Digital Fairness Act.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works .
Norway's Forbrukerrådet, the government-funded Norwegian Consumer Council, published an 80-page report on February 27, arguing that companies across the tech industry are systematically degrading hardware and software after the point of sale to extract additional revenue from locked-in consumers. The report , titled "Breaking Free: Pathways to a Fair Technological Future," singles out connected devices, printers, video games, and cars as categories where the practice is most acute.
The report refers to this practice as “enshittification,” a gradual, three-stage process in which a company initially attracts users with a genuinely useful service, then degrades that service to benefit business customers, and finally squeezes both groups to maximize returns for shareholders. According to the Forbrukerrådet, digital products are uniquely vulnerable to this cycle because manufacturers can alter them remotely after purchase through software updates. Below, you can see a video the group created about the issue as well.
Asus and Acer bring German websites down, leaving users without support or downloads
Gaming PC charges you quarters every time you want to power it on, restoring oldest form of microtransactions
Brace for a barren landscape of new hardware launches, as AI demand reshapes the world of consumer electronics
Tesla will stop selling FSD after Feb 14. FSD will only be available as a monthly subscription thereafter. January 14, 2026
On right to repair, the report notes that the EU Right to Repair Directive, entering into force on July 31, will require manufacturers to reduce parts pairing and allow third-party repairs. This is likely to be a huge thorn in the side of printer manufacturers and device ecosystems that have historically tied consumers to proprietary consumables and service networks.
Alongside the report, the Forbrukerrådet and 28 co-signers — including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Access Now, and Cory Doctorow — sent an open letter to EU policymakers on February 27, urging stronger enforcement of the Digital Markets Act and the GDPR , and pushing back against the European Commission's "Digital Omnibus" package, which the letter argued risks diluting existing consumer protections.
The collective is pushing toward the EU Digital Fairness Act, which the Commission included in its 2026 work program with a proposal expected in Q4 2026. The act is expected to target dark patterns, influencer marketing, addictive design, and unfair personalization across digital products and services.
A public consultation that closed in October 2025 drew roughly 3,000 responses in its first two weeks alone, many from gamers pushing for provisions that would prevent publishers from disabling titles consumers have already purchased — a campaign known as Stop Killing Games.
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/norwegian-consumer-watchdog-calls-out-enshittification#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com/subscription
- Labubu sues 3D printer maker Bambu Lab for items made by its users — MakerWorld design repository in hot water over IP theft by its users
- Grab an excellent 60% keyboard with Bluetooth & silent Topre switches for 25% off — HHKB Professional Hybrid Type-S is down to just $219 right now
- India Fuels Its AI Mission With NVIDIA
- Go beyond the review with Bench, the deepest consumer hardware benchmarking database on the internet — compare hundreds of products across a range of categories
- US gov't preps sweeping export controls for Nvidia, AMD AI hardware — worldwide licensing system would give Trump admin broad authority to block global sales
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.