This may be old news, but I was told by Zero today that they consider decoded logs for my SR/F to be proprietary information, and have a policy to not disclose them.
That is not news to me, but it is to the public. I wanted to hear that from another owner before disclosing what I heard privately, for reasons. That is in fact why I started this thread.
Do you have that in writing? May I contact you offline about this?
If the documents exist, and they're part of the diagnosis of your vehicle, you have right to them. It's no different than them being required to furnish you with the broken parts that they replace.
Getting it from them is more difficult, but it's not impossible. They have to prove why repairs are needed, they also only vaguely have rights to diagnostic data from your vehicle... Courts have not always upheld the user agreements.
Aside from owner education and curiosity, proving the need for repair is where owners would seem to have a legal stake in the event log and the related data. The complement to proving the need for repair is proving responsibility / causation. The owner, without the logs, cannot prove anything about the operation of the vehicle without live diagnostics. This could become critical if an owner or fleet operator enters litigation with Zero.
I find that this is particularly of concern for items like the motor controller which are the single most expensive component outside the battery case, and are indicated for replacement by (what I can tell) very crude troubleshooting flowcharts provided to dealers by Zero.
If this turns out to be true, I would consider this an alienating act by Zero towards its customer base, and it would make my efforts with the unofficial manual and related tooling more difficult in general. I may reconsider my support for Zero entirely.
I do not have an alternate vendor I can point to with a better policy. I've never seen Energica data, and I expect them to be just as jealous if not moreso about vehicle data.