FOX News 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 m...