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The enshittification of garage-door openers reveals a vast and deadly rot
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I'll be at the Studio City branch of the LA Public Library on Monday, November 13 at 1830hPT to launch my new novel, The Lost Cause. There'll be a reading, a talk, a surprise guest (!!) and a signing, with books on sale. Tell your friends! Come on down!
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How could this happen? Owners of Chamberlain MyQ automatic garage door openers just woke up to discover that the company had confiscated valuable features overnight, and that there was nothing they could do about it.
Oh, we know what happened, technically speaking. Chamberlain shut off the API for its garage-door openers, which breaks their integration with home automation systems like Home Assistant. The company even announced that it was doing this, calling the integration an "unauthorized usage" of its products, though the "unauthorized" parties in this case are the people who own Chamberlain products:
https://chamberlaingroup.com/press/a-message-about-our-decision-to-prevent-unauthorized-usage-of-myq
We even know why Chamberlain did this. As Ars Technica's Ron Amadeo points out, shutting off the API is a way for Chamberlain to force its customers to use its ad-beshitted, worst-of-breed app, so that it can make a few pennies by nonconsensually monetizing its customers' eyeballs:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/11/chamberlain-blocks-smart-garage-door-opener-from-working-with-smart-homes/
But how did this happen? How did a giant company like Chamberlain come to this enshittening juncture, in which it felt empowered to sabotage the products it had already sold to its customers? How can this be legal? How can it be good for business? How can the people who made this decision even look themselves in the mirror?
To answer these questions, we must first consider the forces that discipline companies, acting against the impulse to enshittify their products and services. There are four constraints on corporate conduct:
I. Competition. The fear of losing your business to a rival can stay even the most sociopathic corporate executive's hand.
II. Regulation. The fear of being fined, criminally sanctioned, or banned from doing business can check the greediest of leaders.
III. Capability. Corporate executives can dream up all kinds of awful ways to shift value from your side of the ledger to their own, but they can only do the things that are technically feasible.
IV. Self-help. The possibility of customers modifying, reconfiguring or altering their products to restore lost functionality or neutralize antifeatures carries an implied threat to vendors. If a printer company's anti-generic-ink measures drives a customer to jailbreak their printers, the original manufacturer's connection to that customer is permanently severed, as the customer creates a durable digital connection to a rival.
When companies act in obnoxious, dishonest, shitty ways, they aren't merely yielding to temptation – they are evading these disciplining forces. Thus, the Great Enshittening we are living through doesn't reflect an increase in the wickedness of corporate leadership. Rather, it represents a moment in which each of these disciplining factors have been gutted by specific policies.
This is good news, actually. We used to put down rat poison and we didn't have a rat problem. Then we stopped putting down rat poison and rats are eating us alive. That's not a nice feeling, but at least we know at least one way of addressing it – we can start putting down poison again. That is, we can start enforcing the rules that we stopped enforcing, in living memory. Having a terrible problem is no fun, but the best kind of terrible problem to have is one that you know a solution to.
As it happens, Chamberlain is a neat microcosm for all the bad policy choices that created the Era of Enshittification. Let's go through them:
Competition: Chamberlain doesn't have to worry about competition, because it is owned by a private equity fund that "rolled up" all of Chamberlain's major competitors into a single, giant firm. Most garage-door opener brands are actually Chamberlain, including "LiftMaster, Chamberlain, Merlin, and Grifco":
https://www.lakewoodgaragedoor.biz/blog/the-history-of-garage-door-openers
This is a pretty typical PE rollup, and it exploits a bug in US competition law called "Antitrust's Twilight Zone":
https://pluralistic.net/2022/12/16/schumpeterian-terrorism/#deliberately-broken
When companies buy each other, they are subject to "merger scrutiny," a set of guidelines that the FTC and DoJ Antitrust Division use to determine whether the outcome is likely to be bad for competition. These rules have been pretty lax since the Reagan administration, but they've currently being revised to make them substantially more strict:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-and-ftc-seek-comment-draft-merger-guidelines
One of the blind spots in these merger guidelines is an exemption for mergers valued at less than $101m. Under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, these fly under the radar, evading merger scrutiny. That means that canny PE companies can roll up dozens and dozens of standalone businesses, like funeral homes, hospital beds, magic mushrooms, youth addiction treatment centers, mobile home parks, nursing homes, physicians’ practices, local newspapers, or e-commerce sellers:
http://www.economicliberties.us/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Serial-Acquisitions-Working-Paper-R4-2.pdf
By titrating the purchase prices, PE companies – like Blackstone, owners of Chamberlain and all the other garage-door makers – can acquire a monopoly without ever raising a regulatory red flag.
But antitrust enforcers aren't helpless. Under (the long dormant) Section 7 of the Clayton Act, competition regulators can block mergers that lead to "incipient monopolization." The incipiency standard prevented monopolies from forming from 1914, when the Clayton Act passed, until the Reagan administration. We used to put down rat poison, and we didn't have rats. We stopped, and rats are gnawing our faces off. We still know where the rat poison is – maybe we should start putting it down again.
On to regulation. How is it possible for Chamberlain to sell you a garage-door opener that has an API and works with your chosen home automation system, and then unilaterally confiscate that valuable feature? Shouldn't regulation protect you from this kind of ripoff?
It should, but it doesn't. Instead, we have a bunch of regulations that protect Chamberlain from you. Think of binding arbitration, which allows Chamberlain to force you to click through an "agreement" that takes away your right to sue them or join a class-action suit:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/20/benevolent-dictators/#felony-contempt-of-business-model
But regulation could protect you from Chamberlain. Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act allows the FTC to ban any "unfair and deceptive" conduct. This law has been on the books since 1914, but Section 5 has been dormant, forgotten and unused, for decades. The FTC's new dynamo chair, Lina Khan, has revived it, and is use it like a can-opener to free Americans who've been trapped by abusive conduct:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/10/the-courage-to-govern/#whos-in-charge
Khan's used Section 5 powers to challenge privacy invasions, noncompete clauses, and other corporate abuses – the bait-and-switch tactics of Chamberlain are ripe for a Section 5 case. If you buy a gadget because it has five features and then the vendor takes two of them away, they are clearly engaged in "unfair and deceptive" conduct.
On to capability. Since time immemorial, corporate leaders have fetishized "flexibility" in their business arrangements – like the ability to do "dynamic pricing" that changes how much you pay for something based on their guess about how much you are willing to pay. But this impulse to play shell games runs up against the hard limits of physical reality: grocers just can't send an army of rollerskated teenagers around the store to reprice everything as soon as a wealthy or desperate-looking customer comes through the door. They're stuck with crude tactics like doubling the price of a flight that doesn't include a Saturday stay as a way of gouging business travelers on an expense account.
With any shell-game, the quickness of the hand deceives the eye. Corporate crooks armed with computers aren't smarter or more wicked than their analog forebears, but they are faster. Digital tools allow companies to alter the "business logic" of their services from instant to instant, in highly automated ways:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/19/twiddler/
The monopoly coalition has successfully argued that this endless "twiddling" should not be constrained by privacy, labor or consumer protection law. Without these constraints, corporate twiddlers can engage in all kinds of ripoffs, like wage theft and algorithmic wage discrimination:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/12/algorithmic-wage-discrimination/#fishers-of-men
Twiddling is key to the Darth Vader MBA ("I am altering the deal. Pray I don't alter it further"), in which features are confiscated from moment to moment, without warning or recourse:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/26/hit-with-a-brick/#graceful-failure
There's no reason to accept the premise that violating your privacy, labor rights or consumer rights with a computer is so different from analog ripoffs that existing laws don't apply. The unconstrained twiddling of digital ripoff artists is a plague on billions of peoples' lives, and any enforcer who sticks up for our rights will have an army of supporters behind them.
Finally, there's the fear of self-help measures. All the digital flexibility that tech companies use to take value away can be used to take it back, too. The whole modern history of digital computers is the history of "adversarial interoperability," in which the sleazy antifeatures of established companies are banished through reverse-engineering, scraping, bots and other forms of technological guerrilla warfare:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/10/adversarial-interoperability
Adversarial interoperability represents a serious threat to established business. If you're a printer company gouging on toner, your customers might defect to a rival that jailbreaks your security measures. That's what happened to Lexmark, who lost a case against the toner-refilling company Static Controls, which went on to buy Lexmark:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/06/felony-contempt-business-model-lexmarks-anti-competitive-legacy
Sure, your customers are busy and inattentive and you can degrade the quality of your product a lot before they start looking for ways out. But once they cross that threshold, you can lose them forever. That's what happened to Microsoft: the company made the tactical decision to produce a substandard version of Office for the Mac in a drive to get Mac users to switch to Windows. Instead, Apple made Iwork (Pages, Numbers and Keynote), which could read and write every Office file, and Mac users threw away Office, the only Microsoft product they owned, permanently severing their relationship to the company:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/06/adversarial-interoperability-reviving-elegant-weapon-more-civilized-age-slay
Today, companies can operate without worrying about this kind of self-help measure. There' a whole slew of IP rights that Chamberlain can enforce against you if you try to fix your garage-door opener yourself, or look to a competitor to sell you a product that restores the feature they took away:
https://locusmag.com/2020/09/cory-doctorow-ip/
Jailbreaking your Chamberlain gadget in order to make it answer to a rival's app involves bypassing a digital lock. Trafficking in a tool to break a digital lock is a felony under Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright, carrying a five-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine.
In other words, it's not just that tech isn't regulated, allowing for endless twiddling against your privacy, consumer rights and labor rights. It's that tech is badly regulated, to permit unlimited twiddling by tech companies to take away your rightsand to prohibit any twiddling by you to take them back. The US government thumbs the scales against you, creating a regime that Jay Freeman aptly dubbed "felony contempt of business model":
https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/23/how-to-fix-cars-by-breaking-felony-contempt-of-business-model/
All kinds of companies have availed themselves of this government-backed superpower. There's DRM – digital locks, covered by DMCA 1201 – in powered wheelchairs:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/06/when-drm-comes-your-wheelchair
In dishwashers:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/03/cassette-rewinder/#disher-bob
In treadmills:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/22/vapescreen/#jane-get-me-off-this-crazy-thing
In tractors:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/05/08/about-those-kill-switched-ukrainian-tractors/
It should come as no surprise to learn that Chamberlain has used DMCA 1201 to block interoperable garage door opener components:
https://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1233&context=iplr
That's how we arrived at this juncture, where a company like Chamberlain can break functionality its customers value highly, solely to eke out a minuscule new line of revenue by selling ads on their own app.
Chamberlain bought all its competitors.
Chamberlain operates in a regulatory environment that is extremely tolerant of unfair and deceptive practices. Worse: they can unilaterally take away your right to sue them, which means that if regulators don't bestir themselves to police Chamberlain, you are shit out of luck.
Chamberlain has endless flexibility to unilaterally alter its products' functionality, in fine-grained ways, even after you've purchased them.
Chamberlain can sue you if you try to exercise some of that same flexibility to protect yourself from their bad practices.
Combine all four of those factors, and of course Chamberlain is going to enshittify its products. Every company has had that one weaselly asshole at the product-planning table who suggests a petty grift like breaking every one of the company's customers' property to sell a few ads. But historically, the weasel lost the argument to others, who argued that making every existing customer furious would affect the company's bottom line, costing it sales and/or fines, and prompting customers to permanently sever their relationship with the company by seeking out and installing alternative software. Take away all the constraints on a corporation's worst impulses, and this kind of conduct is inevitable:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/28/microincentives-and-enshittification/
This isn't limited to Chamberlain. Without the discipline of competition, regulation, self-help measures or technological limitations, every industry in undergoing wholesale enshittification. It's not a coincidence that Chamberlain's grift involves a push to move users into its app. Because apps can't be reverse-engineered and modified without risking DMCA 1201 prosecution, forcing a user into an app is a tidy and reliable way to take away that user's rights.
Think about ad-blocking. One in four web users has installed an ad-blockers ("the biggest boycott in world history" -Doc Searls). Zero app users have installed app-blockers, because they don't exist, because making one is a felony. An app is just a web-page wrapped in enough IP to make it a crime to defend yourself against corporate predation:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/27/an-audacious-plan-to-halt-the-internets-enshittification-and-throw-it-into-reverse/
The temptation to enshitiffy isn't new, but the ability to do so without consequence is a modern phenomenon, the intersection of weak policy enforcement and powerful technology. Your car is autoenshittified, a rolling rent-seeking platform that spies on you and price-gouges you:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/24/rent-to-pwn/#kitt-is-a-demon
Cars are in an uncontrolled skid over Enshittification Cliff. Honda, Toyota, VW and GM all sell cars with infotainment systems that harvest your connected phone's text-messages and send them to the corporation for data-mining. What's more, a judge in Washington state just ruled that this is legal:
https://therecord.media/class-action-lawsuit-cars-text-messages-privacy
While there's no excuse for this kind of sleazy conduct, we can reasonably anticipate that if our courts would punish companies for engaging in it, they might be able to resist the temptation. No wonder Mozilla's latest Privacy Not Included research report called cars "the worst product category we have ever reviewed":
https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/articles/its-official-cars-are-the-worst-product-category-we-have-ever-reviewed-for-privacy/
I mean, Nissan tries to infer facts about your sex life and sells those inferences to marketing companies:
https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/nissan/
But the OG digital companies are the masters of enshittification. Microsoft has been at this game for longer than anyone, and every day brings a fresh way that Microsoft has worsened its products without fear of consequence. The latest? You can't delete your OneDrive account until you provide an acceptable explanation for your disloyalty:
https://www.theverge.com/2023/11/8/23952878/microsoft-onedrive-windows-close-app-notification
It's tempting to think that the cruelty is the point, but it isn't. It's almost never the point. The point is power and money. Unscrupulous businesses have found ways to make money by making their products worse since the industrial revolution. Here's Jules Dupuis, writing about 19th century French railroads:
It is not because of the few thousand francs which would have to be spent to put a roof over the third-class carriages or to upholster the third-class seats that some company or other has open carriages with wooden benches. What the company is trying to do is to prevent the passengers who can pay the second class fare from traveling third class; it hits the poor, not because it wants to hurt them, but to frighten the rich. And it is again for the same reason that the companies, having proved almost cruel to the third-class passengers and mean to the second-class ones, become lavish in dealing with first-class passengers. Having refused the poor what is necessary, they give the rich what is superfluous.
https://www.tumblr.com/mostlysignssomeportents/731357317521719296/having-refused-the-poor-what-is-necessary-they
But as bad as all this is, let me remind you about the good part: we know how to stop companies from enshittifying their products. We know what disciplines their conduct: competition, regulation, capability and self-help measures. Yes, rats are gnawing our eyeballs, but we know which rat-poison to use, and where to put it to control those rats.
Competition, regulation, constraint and self-help measures all backstop one another, and while one or a few can make a difference, they are most powerful when they're all mobilized in concert. Think of the failure of the EU's landmark privacy law, the GDPR. While the GDPR proved very effective against bottom-feeding smaller ad-tech companies, the worse offenders, Meta and Google, have thumbed their noses at it.
This was enabled in part by the companies' flying an Irish flag of convenience, maintaining the pretense that they have to be regulated in a notorious corporate crime-haven:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/05/15/finnegans-snooze/#dirty-old-town
That let them get away with all kinds of shenanigans, like ignoring the GDPR's requirement that you should be able to easily opt out of data-collection without having to go through cumbersome "cookie consent" dialogs or losing access to the service as punishment for declining to be tracked.
As the noose has tightened around these surveillance giants, they're continuing to play games. Meta now says that the only way to opt out of data-collection in the EU is to pay for the service:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/30/markets-remaining-irrational/#steins-law
This is facially illegal under the GDPR. Not only are they prohibited from punishing you for opting out of collection, but the whole scheme ignores the nature of private data collection. If Facebook collects the fact that you and I are friends, but I never opted into data-collection, they have violated the GDPR, even if you were coerced into granting consent:
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023/11/the-pay-or-consent-challenge-for-platform-regulators.html
The GDPR has been around since 2016 and Google and Meta are still invading 500 million Europeans' privacy. This latest delaying tactic could add years to their crime-spree before they are brought to justice.
But most of this surveillance is only possible because so much of how you interact with Google and Meta is via an app, and an app is just a web-page that's a felony to make an ad-blocker for. If the EU were to legalize breaking DRM – repealing Article 6 of the 2001 Copyright Directive – then we wouldn't have to wait for the European Commission to finally wrestle these two giant companies to the ground. Instead, EU companies could make alternative clients for all of Google and Meta's services that don't spy on you, without suffering the fate of OG App, which tried this last winter and was shut down by "felony contempt of business model":
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/05/battery-vampire/#drained
Enshittification is demoralizing. To quote @wilwheaton, every update to the services we use inspires "dread of 'How will this complicate things as I try to maintain privacy and sanity in a world that demands I have this thing to operate?'"
https://wilwheaton.tumblr.com/post/698603648058556416/cory-doctorow-if-you-see-this-and-have-thoughts
But there are huge natural constituencies for the four disciplining forces that keep enshittification at bay.
Remember, Antitrust's Twilight Zone doesn't just allow rollups of garage-door opener companies – it's also poison for funeral homes, hospital beds, magic mushrooms, youth addiction treatment centers, mobile home parks, nursing homes, physicians’ practices, local newspapers, or e-commerce sellers.
The Binding Arbitration scam that stops Chamberlain customers from suing the company also stops Uber drivers from suing over stolen wages, Turbotax customers from suing over fraud, and many other victims of corporate crime from getting a day in court.
The failure to constrain twiddling to protect privacy, labor rights and consumer rights enables a host of abuses, from stalking, doxing and SWATting to wage theft and price gouging:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/06/attention-rents/#consumer-welfare-queens
And Felony Contempt of Business Model is used to screw you over every time you refill your printer, run your dishwasher, or get your Iphone's screen replaced.
The actions needed to halt and reverse this enshittification are well understood, and the partisans for taking those actions are too numerous to count. It's taken a long time for all those individuals suffering under corporate abuses to crystallize into a movement, but at long last, it's happening.
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/09/lead-me-not-into-temptation/#chamberlain
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Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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chsgaragerepair · 1 year
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CHS Garage Door Repair of Seattle
Address
12544 15th Ave NE UNIT 309, Seattle, WA 98125
Phone
(206) 245-5495
Email
Website
If you're in need of expert garage door repair in the Seattle area, look no further than CHS Garage Repair. Our team of experienced technicians has been providing top-notch services to residents and businesses alike for years. Whether you're dealing with a stuck door, a noisy opener, or a broken spring, we have the tools, knowledge, and expertise to get the job done right. With our commitment to customer satisfaction and our use of only the finest parts and materials, you can trust us to provide the best garage door repair in Seattle, WA. Contact us today to schedule a service appointment and let us help you keep your garage door functioning at its best.
Category: Garage Doors Service or Product: Garage Doors Service
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Sunday-Thursday: Open 24 hours Friday: 12.30am–4pm Saturday: Closed
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Spartan Garage doors Beachwood
Address
Serving area: Beachwood, OH 44122
Phone
440-904-4122
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Spartan Garage Doors Beachwood, OH is a reputable garage door repair company in Beachwood, Ohio. Because of our ever-growing loyal customer base, we have expanded our service location to Beachwood and nearby areas, dedicated to providing the highest quality products, unique solutions, and great customer service. Our garage door repair Beachwood has the expertise and knowledge to get things back on track with the minimum of fuss and hassle. Garage door openers, springs, and motors can malfunction at any time of the day or night. That is why we offer a 24/7 emergency repair service, so you can get help at any time. Visit our website or schedule an appointment with us today!
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Bus. hrs/day
24 hours a day 7 days a week
No. of employees 5-9
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Superior Garage Door Repair - White Bear Lake
Address
1897 Buerkle Rd, White Bear Lake, MN 55110
Business phone
651-615-6400
Business email
Website
Superior Garage Door Repair - White Bear Lake is a top-rated garage door repair company that serves the residents and businesses of White Bear Lake, MN. We are dedicated to providing our customers with prompt, reliable, and affordable garage door repair services that are tailored to meet their unique needs.
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24 hours a day, 7 days a week
No. of employees 5-9
Category: Garage Doors
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Superior Garage Door Repair - Hopkins
Address
300 Adams Ave, Hopkins, MN 55343
Phone
612-400-8696
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We have a team of professional experts who can perform all types of services that include; garage door repair, maintenance, Garage door Spring replacement and others. We have a huge list of satisfied customers.
Category: Garage Doors
No. of employees 5-9
Bus. hrs/day
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
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doortechgaragedoors · 2 years
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DOOR-TECH Garage Doors
Address
117 Honey Creek Ln, Nashville, TN 37211
Phone
(615) 716-1178
Email
Website
Door-Tech Garage Doors is the ultimate solution to all your garage door needs in Tennessee. Our experienced technicians can handle all kinds of garage door repair, maintenance, servicing and installation. You need not for searching for a specialist for your garage door needs in Nashville; we are a local company committed to meeting the needs of our clients in the region.
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Category: Garage Doors
Service or Product: Garage Doors Service
No. of employees 5-9
Bus. hrs/day
Sunday 7AM–10PM Monday 7AM–10PM Tuesday 7AM–10PM Wednesday 7AM–10PM Thursday 7AM–10PM Friday 7AM–4PM Saturday Closed
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lockandgarage · 1 year
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Lock And Garage
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Serving area, St Paul, MN 55106
Phone
786-876-4475
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We are a company that provides all the information a home owner would require about locksmiths and garage doors. Finding a reliable locksmith or garage door repair service is easy with the information provided on our site. In addition, visit our site if you're curious in garage doors, openers, cables, and springs, or if you'd want to learn more about locks, keys, electric door locks, keyless locks, etc.
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Category:Home
Service or Product:Home services
No of employees
5-9
Bus. hrs/day
24 hour a day, 7 days a week
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Supreme Garage Door Repair
Address
5857 128th Bay N, Hugo, MN 55038
Phone
(612) 441-3329
Email
Website
Supreme Garage Door Repair is a fast same day service provider. Our services are budget friendly. We offer many different styles of both commercial and residential garage doors. We install high quality garage doors and openers from trusted manufacturers only. If your garage door isn’t functioning the way it was designed to, we can help you. Our technicians always have what is needed in their work trucks to get the job done the first time. We are here to help, call us today or book an appointment online.
Category: Garage Doors
Service or Product: Garage Doors Service
No. of employees 5-9
Bus. hrs/day
7 days a week 7am - 9pm
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Superior Garage Door Repair - Minneapolis
Address
1405 Lilac Dr N #160B, Minneapolis, MN 55422
Phone
(612) 999-1228
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Superior Garage Door Repair Provides Garage Door Repair And Services in Minneapolis And The Surrounding Cities. We Provide Ultimate Garage Doors Solutions From Residential and Commercial. we repair garage door springs, garage door openers, cables, drums, tracks, ETC. Superior Garage Door also provides with 21 point Inspection and Yearly Lube And Tune. Book with us Today and we will guarantee a Superior Service
Category: Garage Doors
No. of employees 5-9
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24 hours a day, 7 days a week
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Superior Garage Door Repair - Eden Prairie
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6595 Edenvale Blvd Suite 180B, Eden Prairie, MN 55346
Phone
(612) 999-2984
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Superior Garage Door Repair in Eden Prairie is here to provide you with the Best garage door experience to cover all of your needs. from A Garage Door installation, to repair and opener replacement. when it comes to your overhead door we will Cover it all. we are license insured and bonded to assure a Superior Service when we walk away from your Door. call us today to hear more
Category: Garage Doors
No. of employees 5-9
Bus. hrs/day
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
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chsgaragedoors · 2 years
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CHS Garage Door Repair of Redmond
Address
8137 161th Ave NE, Redmond, WA 98052
Phone
(206) 488-0702
Email
Website
CHS Garage Door Repair of Redmond is an entirely family owned and operated garage door repair company in Seattle, WA. We have been around for years, and have a reputation for offering an array of garage door repair services. Among the services we provide are the repair/replacement of broken springs, garage door openers, rollers, and installation of new garage doors. Due to our outstanding service and reasonable prices, we are trusted by our clients. If you need garage door repair in Seattle, WA, you can rely on our experienced contractors.
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Category: Garage Doors
Service or Product: Garage Doors Service
Bus. hrs/day
Mon - Wed: 8AM – 7PM, Thu - Fri 8.30AM – 7Pm, Sat 8AM – 7PM, Sun: Closed
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Superior Garage Door Repair - Stillwater
Address
305 Greeley St S #204, Stillwater, MN 55082
Phone
((612) 888-8719
Email
Visit us
Superior Garage Door Repair Stillwater provides residential and commercial garage door repair services to Stillwater, MN area residents, and businesses. Among the company's services are installing, replacing, and repairing garage doors. They can provide same-day services. Whenever the company undertakes a project, a representative is dispatched to evaluate the client's garage door and assist the client in making informed decisions. The company offers regular maintenance to ensure that the doors remain in proper condition for a long time. It offers various services, including garage door replacements, adjustment, maintenance, lubrication, opener repair, and spring replacement. Moreover, the company also installs roller and sectional garage doors.
Category: Garage Doors
Bus. hrs/day
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
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Superior Garage Door Repair - St. Cloud
Address
14 7th Ave N Suit 115, St Cloud, MN 56303
Phone
(320) 400-0369
Email
Visit us:
Superior Garage Door Repair - St. Cloud is a trusted and reliable company serving the St. Cloud, MN area. We specialize in all types of garage door repair, installation, and maintenance services for both residential and commercial clients. Our team of experienced technicians is committed to delivering high-quality workmanship and exceptional customer service. We use only the best tools and equipment to ensure that your garage door is functioning smoothly and efficiently. Whether you need a simple repair or a complete garage door installation, Superior Garage Door Repair - St. Cloud has got you covered. Contact us today to schedule an appointment and experience the superior service that we're known for.
Category: Garage Doors
Bus. hrs/day
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
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gamesatwork · 6 months
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e440 — Elendil or Edronax?
Splashing about with Flipper, plethoras of popups, roundabout conversation on automotive data privacy, large scale 3D printing & more!
Photo by Thandy Yung on Unsplash Published 13 November 2023 Michael and Michael get together to talk tech and cover an ocean of topics, including denial of service with Flipper Zero and the similarly named 1960s TV show, plethoras of popups, roundabouts, automotive data privacy, fun games, a 1m tall 3D printer and much more. The co-hosts dive in for this episode with a denial of service story…
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jenny123scm · 1 year
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Modern Overhead Door installs smart garage door openers. Contact us at call (920) 354-6887 for a free quote on how to add technology to your garage doors for your home or business.
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greenbuildermedia · 1 year
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