December
11, 2014
![]() |
A new 2.0 machine with specially marked K-Cups.
(Keurig.com)
|
In
March, when coffee giant Keurig announced its 2.0 brewers would be designed
exclusively for its expensive K-Cup single-use pods, people were understandably
outraged.
It
meant that the new machines, designed with a scanner that reads and rejects any
pods without an officially licensed digital ink stamp on the top foil, would no
longer accept non-Keurig-branded coffee pods, usually at a fraction of the
price.
The
company claimed that the move was to ensure consistent quality between brews
but companies supplying the non-Keurig pods cried foul, according to Quartz.
Earlier
this year, Treehouse
Foods, one of the third-party pod makers, filed a lawsuit against Green
Mountain Coffee- Keurig's parent company --for attempting to monopolize the
market and promised to reverse engineer the brewer and design compatible pods
within "months."
Now
that Keurig 2.0 machine is on the market it didn't take long for that to
happen.
The
Internet is now awash with several hacks that get around the company’s
intricate scanning system. A quick search on YouTube brings up hundreds of
hack videos, including "permanent fixes."
Over
the summer, Mother Parkers Tea & Coffee, a Keurig Green Mountain Coffee
competitor, announced that its new pods are compatible with 2.0 machines. The
press release does go in detail about how or why but want to “ensure consumers
continue to enjoy the widest possible choice” for their hot beverage choices.
Established
in September, KeurigHack.com features
a video that shows a “foolproof” guide to tricking your machine into accepting
unofficial coffee pods. But the method involves using the foil from a
previously used licensed K-Cup. Though it involves the purchase of at least one
pack of official Keurig pods, it may be the simplest method.
On hacking site SecList,
there’s a tongue-in-check five-step method to decoding the Keurig which also
involves using an officially marked pod
The
instructions read:
“After
brewing is complete, attacker removes the genuine K-Cup from the Keurig and
uses a knife or scissors to carefully remove the full foil lid from the K-Cup,
ensuring to keep the full edges intact. Attacker keeps this for use in the
attack.”
Despite
these hacks, Keurig
still dominates the in-home brewing industry with over 70 percent market
share.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Join the conversation