If Behringer is a company you don't want to buy stuff from (and at present that's how I feel about them) then you'll avoid their products up to the point that your desire for one exceeds your distaste for the company.
In my case I disapprove of their activities more than I want a 2600 clone, so I've skipped that (and may well end up getting one of the new Korg ones if I'm so inclined later; I really like the look of them).
If they were to bring out a spanking good Jupiter 8 or CS-80 clone in the near future then I would almost certainly buy it despite my current distaste for them because my desire for one exceeds that disapproval. That said, I could also see myself skipping it and getting a Kurzweil K2700 as a consolation prize instead and perhaps coming back to the Behringer clone at a later date once they've improved their behaviour.
However even if I did buy the DS-80 my threshold would remain, so I'd continue to avoid them for other things. The net effect is still a vote with the wallet. I bought a little Mackie mixer for use with my Eurorack + Moog stack yesterday. I wasn't specifically after a Mackie but when I searched my vendor of choice for small mixers between £50 and £150 I filtered out all the Behringer results and picked the most suitable from the remaining offerings. I was particularly happy as Hugh gave it a good


Had none of this happened I may well have ended up with a Behringer one but the list of things I haven't-bought-but-would-have (Neutron, Poly D, 2600, small mixer) from Behringer is growing and is probably only another entry away from £2k, which has gone to Arturia, Novation, ASM and Mackie instead. I'm not doing it to make a difference to Behringer, but to make a difference to me ... and it does.
My hope is that Behringer will demonstrate better ethics going forward such that the threshold can naturally reduce over time. I don't enjoy disliking them.