Copyright Office exemption makes McDonald’s ice cream machines repairable


McDonald’s always-broken ice cream machines might finally get easier to fix. That’s because the US Copyright Office granted an exemption allowing third parties to diagnose and repair commercial equipment — including the ones that make your McFlurries.
Now, franchise owners will be able to break through the digital locks that have blocked them from repairing McDonald’s ice cream machines for years. According to the Copyright Office, the exemption will allow people to diagnose, perform maintenance, and repair “retail-level commercial food preparation equipment.”
The decision is part of the Copyright Office’s final rule granting exemptions to Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). This exemption-making process happens every three years and is supposed to ensure that the DMCA doesn’t negatively impact people trying to use copyrighted material.
The Copyright Office’s decision doesn’t fully cover Public Knowledge and iFixit’s request for an exemption covering a wider range of commercial and industrial equipment, but at least it will address McDonald’s faulty ice cream machines. “There’s nothing vanilla about this victory; an exemption for retail-level commercial food preparation equipment will spark a flurry of third-party repair activity and enable businesses to better serve their customer,” Meredith Rose, Public Knowledge’s senior policy counsel, said in a press release.
The new exemption will officially go into effect on October 28th and might offer some peace of mind the next time you’re waiting to order a McFlurry at a McDonald’s drive-thru.
You Might Also Like
Suspect arrested after threats against TikTok’s Culver City headquarters
Police say they have arrested a suspect allegedly connected to multiple online threats that led TikTok to evacuate its headquarters...
Department of Energy cancels $7.5B of clean energy projects in mostly blue states
The Department of Energy said Wednesday night it was canceling 321 awards worth $7.56 billion that were largely focused on...
OpenAI takes on Google, Amazon with new agentic shopping system
ChatGPT users in the U.S. can now make Etsy and Shopify purchases within conversations, marking a next step towards the future of online...
Discover how developer tools are shifting fast at Disrupt 2025
The idea of hiring your “first critical engineer” is getting a serious reality check at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, October 27–29...