Mazda’s DMCA takedown kills a hobbyist’s smart car API tool
by Kevin Purdy from Ars Technica - All content on (#6FN6V)
Enlarge (credit: Jonathan Gitlin)
Before last week, owners of certain Mazda vehicles who also had a Home Assistant setup could create some handy connections for their car.
A glimpse at some of Home Assistant's Mazda data potential, before it was removed. (credit: Phish / CX70 Forum)
One CX60 driver had a charger that would only power on when it confirmed his car was plugged in and would alert him if he left the trunk open. Another used Home Assistant to control their charger based on the dynamic prices of an Agile Octopus energy plan. Yet another had really thought it through, using Home Assistant to check the gas before their morning commute, alert them if their windows were down before rain was forecast, and remotely unlock and start the car in cold conditions. The possibilities were vastand purportedly beyond what Mazda's official app offered.Mazda, however, had issues with the project, which was largely the free-time work of one software developer, Brandon Rothweiler. In a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notice sent to GitHub, Mazda (or an authorized agent) alleges that Rothweiler's integration: