Richard's observation is interesting, and I feel like I have something to say in this area:
Based on what I've observed, Zero is not limiting access to battery state because of aging, but seemingly so they can try more dynamic approaches to range and charge state indications.
Having observed some tests with recent (but not latest) firmware, I think these approaches should be reconsidered, based on my experience in the software industry, engineering mathematics education, and having spent some time calibrating electrical instrumentation and performing equipment analysis in the US nuclear navy.
I have not seen the latest dealership firmware, but the general firmware management process has seemed too raw and error-prone. Zero reacts to such tension by clamping down, and I would strongly encourage any engineer or manager there to resist this trend and consider that operational ergonomics is an actual studied field that they can approach without risking project deadlines or increasing risk for dealers or customers.
Customers need a simple but effective model of how their vehicle operates in order to understand its state in both normal and abnormal conditions. Dealers also need a less simple but effective model of the vehicle to troubleshoot and help keep the vehicles running affordably and provide feedback when failures are triaged. Zero has succeeded in simplicity for the owner but erred in effectiveness for both owners and dealers as a class.
I'm using the term "effectiveness" in a narrow technical sense of whether an owner or technician can read an indication and act on it safely and correctly.
The user is in almost all cases not informed how to act on a Zero motorcycle's indications in a meaningful way, and my self-assigned role in charting the paths through working with Zero's systems in the unofficial manual is unpaid work for Zero to compensate for this. I can only hope to help dealerships out, but I have no visibility there and just vaguely hope that I'm not causing them grief with customers harassing them or ignoring them.
Obviously, I'm going to proceed with or without Zero's assistance, but I don't agree with the manifestation of their strategy both as observed and as declared. I think the bikes can be more serviceable, more reliable, and more understandable than they are; it's debatable how Zero can get there, but the ingredients are available as long as the process changes to improve them.