I'm not aware of any company that has manufactured a DIP insertion machine in decades. Nobody uses them anymore because almost nobody is still designing new boards with DIP components. So the bent over leads likely won't be an issue going forward. Fun machines to work on and watch operate. Used to maintain one at my previous job. We ran it maybe one shift per month. I think they scrapped it by now.
That's one thing, at some point, people will need to realize..... DIP components are almost completely gone from industrial manufacturing, and are becoming increasingly difficult to source. We are not far from the point where it will impossible to make boards with these parts. I know at least one pinball PCB maker that is dependent on used parts for multiple components. Audio processing and amplifiers are the biggest examples right now but even 74XX logic stuff is rapidly disappearing in quantity. Eventually, as a hobby, we're going to have to accept surface mount manufacturing in order to survive.
Same with axial resistors and diodes. On the industrial level, they're becoming increasingly rare. Parts are easy to get but very few places are still running axial sequencers and inserters. Too much of a footprint and they're maintenance hogs. That and, again, nobody is designing stuff with axial resistors anymore for production purposes. They're exponentially more expensive than SMT parts, and take a massive amount more labor. Getting harder to find places that are even willing to give a quote on assemblies with high numbers of axial parts.