Fight for your right to fix your own iPhone

Authored by salon.com and submitted by maxwellhill
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Planned obsolescence has long been a consumer expense and irritation. Now brand-name profiteers are pushing a new abuse: Repair prevention. This treacherous corporate scheme does more than gouge buyers on the original purchase. Using both legal ruses and digital lockdowns, major manufacturers are quietly attempting to outlaw the natural instinct of us humanoids to fiddle with and improve the material things we own in order to charge us to fix it. Indeed, the absurdity and arrogance of their overreach is even more basic: They’re out to corporatize the very idea of “owning.”

Chances are you’ve bought an Apple iPad, Chevy Malibu, Amazon Kindle, Samsung TV, GE Frigidaire or some other brand-name consumer product equipped with a dazzling array of digital doodads. And in doing so, you unwittingly consented to the corporation’s repair-prevention “gotcha” tucked into its license agreement. But in addition to deceiving and/or intimidating buyers into believing they’re legally required to trek to the high-dollar Corporate Tech Genius Store for routine maintenance, powerhouse corporate marketers are increasingly forcing customers to bring all their repair business to them.

Such an attack on individual and independent fixers is unprecedented — with cabals in industry after industry asserting their ownership control far after sales. This explosive, defining issue of the people’s democratic authority over corporate behavior has received little media coverage, is not on the radar of either major political party, and it is not widely understood — even by people who rely on the repair economy. But that lack of public awareness is about to change. Consumer advocates, small businesses, farm groups, computer activists and environmentalists are coming together in a unified, bipartisan, full-throated rebellion: The “Right-to-Repair” Movement.

This challenge to the collective might of many of the richest corporations on the globe has a solid chance of succeeding because in addition to anger, this corporate overreach stirs a visceral reaction: The profiteers are not merely messing with our “stuff,” but with us — our sense of ourselves as self-reliant, in-charge people.

This year, the grassroots groups got lawmakers in 11 state legislatures to introduce and begin pushing various versions of “Fair Repair” bills. This show of strength has startled the likes of Apple, Deere and IBM, flushing their policies from the shadows and leading the companies to mount public, lobbying campaigns to protect their greed.

OptimalDouche on July 30th, 2017 at 18:23 UTC »

Another misleading article with a horrible explanation of an issue. Thanks, Salon. Possibly the worst article I've seen on this issue.

designgoddess on July 30th, 2017 at 17:57 UTC »

How can they prevent you from repairing your own device?

bonusbunny on July 30th, 2017 at 16:10 UTC »

In my opinion, Right to Repair in the technology industry is less about actually repairing the device and more about the ideology of preventing the companies from dictating what you can do with your device.

On the other hand, Right to Repair is an extremely important issue in Agriculture. John Deere is one of the largest tractor companies in the world and opposes Right to Repair. This means that for a farmer if his tractor breaks in the middle of harvest he can not legally repair it himself, he has to pay a service rep from the John Deere dealer to come and repair the tractor for him even though he easily could've done it himself.

So although Right to Repair is frivolous and stupid in some industries it is pertinent and important in other industries. (Here are some links to articles that further explain Right to Repair)

http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/a25246/right-to-repair-legislation-under-fire-in-nebraska/

http://time.com/4828099/farmers-and-apple-fight-over-the-toolbox/

https://www.eff.org/issues/right-to-repair

Edit: spelling and grammar fixes