An extensive bill aimed at promoting economic competition and signed on Friday by President Joe Biden, calls on the Federal Trade Commission to enact regulations to limit anticompetitive restrictions that prohibit consumers' ability to repair their own gadgets on their own terms.
Biden specifically asked the FTC toslowto "unfair anticompetitive restrictions on the right to third-party repair or self-repair gadgets, as restrictions imposed by powerful manufacturers prevent the public from repairing their own equipment."
The bill is a major victory for right-to-repair advocates who have long called for the choice to repair their technological devices themselves or through third parties, and not just by the manufacturer.
The right of repair states that everyone must have access to the OEM parts, manuals and software required to perform these repairs. Major gadget makers have been pushing to prevent this kind of accessibility in repair, but the right-of-way movement has grown a lot in recent years.
In particular, Biden targeted the manufacturers mobile phones, which “impose restrictions on repairs, making them very expensive and time-consuming, limiting the distribution of spare parts, diagnostics tools, but also the repair tools.”
In a statement, PIRG Director of Repair Rights Nathan Proctor said, "It was a great day for the right to repair our devices."
“More repair options help save money and reduce downtime. This is a victory. "