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Brother printers causing issues with third party inks

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In the past, Brother has consistently allowed the use of third-party toner in their printers, showcasing a consumer-friendly approach to the printing industry. In recent years, however, firmware updates have been implemented to discourage toner usage from third-party manufacturers. When a user attempts to install a third-party toner, the Brother printer displays an error message warning that the toner may damage the printer and only OEM (original equipment manufacturer) toner is considered safe. Additionally, some users have reported a notable decrease in print quality when using third-party toners after the firmware update. These updates disable color registration among other core printing features, encouraging the use of toners manufactured by Brother.[1]

Exploitative Practices

  • Post-Sale Function Removal – Firmware updates retroactively remove previously available features, such as automatic color registration, for users using non-OEM toner.[2][3]
  • Vendor lock-in via DRM – Printers continue to function with third-party toner but print at lower quality unless OEM toner is installed.[1]
  • Anti-consumer software practices – Firmware updates cannot be easily rolled back, preventing consumers from restoring lost functionality.[4]
  • Deceptive practices – Printers do not reject third-party toner but intentionally cause a toner failure, which discourages use of third party toners.[5][3]

How it works

1. Consumers purchase a Brother laser printer that previously accepted third-party toner.

2. A firmware update (e.g., W1.56) is pushed, which does not notify users of any major functional changes.

3. After updating, users report that:

  • Color registration fails automatically, misaligning prints.[6]
  • Brother support acknowledges that installing OEM toner will resolve the issue instantly.[5]
  • Older firmware versions are removed from Brother’s servers, preventing downgrades.[7]

Impact on Consumer Protection

  • Consumers may no longer use the ink provider of their choice without compromising the functionality of their printer.
  • Consumers previously able to save money by buying third-party toner are now required to purchase OEM toner at a higher cost to maintain printer functionality.
  • Brother’s consumer-friendly reputation for allowing third-party toner is now tarnished.
  • No prior warning of change in the printer's core functionality had been given before these firmware updates were installed.
  • Workarounds tend to involve blocking the firmware updates or attempting downgrading the firmware, both of which Brother actively discourages.

Brother's response

On March 5th 2025, following the publication of a video on the Louis Rossmann YouTube channel, Brother addressed the issue in a response given to Ars Technica and stated the following: [8]

"We are aware of the recent false claims suggesting that a Brother firmware update may have restricted the use of third-party ink cartridges. Please be assured that Brother firmware updates do not block the use of third-party ink in our machines."

They also detailed that:

"Brother printers do not intentionally degrade print quality based on whether a Brother Genuine or non-genuine ink/ toner cartridge is used. Brother cannot verify the quality of printing that will result when using a third-party compatible with a Brother printer."

In their conclusion, they've attributed consumers' confusion and frustration to the following:

"Brother encourages the use of Brother Genuine ink and toner for optimal performance and reliability, and it is standard practice that we perform a Brother Genuine check when troubleshooting a Brother printer. Compatible supplies may range in quality, and in order to verify that a printer is working properly, we like to troubleshoot with Brother Genuine supplies. We believe this check in the process may have led to a misunderstanding[,] but as we confirmed, the firmware update would not be responsible for the degradation of quality or removal of printer features."

User evidence & reports

Hacker News Discussion (2022)

  • Users noticed that Brother's printers do accept third-party toner instead of outright rejection due to failed compatibility. This leads some users to suspect the consequential loss of print quality as a deliberate act.
  • One user stated:

Brother seems to be apparently accepting the ink, but then purposefully making the print quality poorer.[5]

Reddit reports (r/printers)

  • A firmware update on the Brother MFC-3750 disabled automatic color registration when third-party toner was detected.[2]
  • A Brother support agent confirmed that installing OEM toner would "fix" the issue instantly, supporting user claims that the printer was being artificially restricted.

GitHub developer investigation

  • A project analyzing Brother firmware updates discovered that older firmware versions were removed from Brother’s servers, making it impossible for users to roll back to a working version.[4]
  • Another GitHub discussion showed that Brother firmware updates lock out more non-Brother toner cartridges with each update.[7]
  • This is similar to HP Dynamic Security, which blocks non-OEM cartridges.

Quality Example

Brother HL-L9310CDW 1.69 1.32, before deletion of colour registration.
Brother HL-L9310CDW 1.69 1.32, before deletion of color registration.

Comparison to other industry decisions

Company Tactic Used
HP "Dynamic Security" firmware updates blocking non-OEM ink
Epson Ink expiration DRM, even when cartridges are full
Canon Firmware updates that disable scanning when ink is low
Brother Print degradation for non-OEM toner users

Potential legal implications

If the removal of core printing functionality after purchase is deliberate, this action may qualify as a deceptive trade practice in multiple jurisdictions.

Mitigations available to users

  1. Avoid Firmware Updates – Disable auto-updates to prevent forced function removal. This may, however, lead to security risks.
  2. Attempt to downgrade – Some users have managed to roll back firmware, though this is becoming increasingly difficult.[7]
  3. HL-L9310CDW (with firmware main 1.69, sub 1.31): On the menu of the printer, delete the color registration to improve quality by reducing the misalignment of the individual colors. However, the best solution is to have a configuration option to set the offset individual (X, Y) for each color with the smallest possible increment, perhaps through an external (CUPS) printer driver.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Jacobs, Skye (2025-03-05). "Brother printers are quietly sabotaging third-party toner with firmware updates".
  2. 2.0 2.1 Brother MFC firmware update - non-genuine toner now disables critical features.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Brother MFC-L3370CDW Firmware Downgrade needed
  4. 4.0 4.1 Brother printer firmware downgrade discussion.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Tell HN: Brother printers now locking out non-OEM paraphernalia.
  6. ArchWiki - Printer-specific problems with Brother.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Discussion on firmware rollback for Brother printers.
  8. Brother denies using firmware updates to brick printers with third-party ink