California will vote for the right to repair

Right to Repair or Right to Repair in California. If you do not know what it is, we've mentioned it in one previous publication.

Since our previous publication: Many manufacturers do not want to allow their customers to be able to repair their devices themselves or to do so from a local specialists. Instead, they prefer to do it themselves (or through authorized dealers), which often comes at a cost that is much more than what you would pay at a local repair shop, and of course much more than it would cost you to have it do it yourself.California

So most manufacturers do not sell genuine spare parts and do not offer information on repairing the devices. In other words, they want to make it as difficult as possible for anyone to repair broken appliances.

Apple, for example, has made even bigger strides by even making its own screws (not the common safety screws, but its own "Pentalobe" screws) to prevent users from opening their devices easily with a regular screwdriver.

Of course most manufacturers would prefer to buy a new phone or a computer in the event of a breakdown, which we often see, with very high charges for each repair, or with the well-known "impossible" repair phenomenon.

Of course you can always repair your device. There are websites where you can buy parts from the same suppliers that the manufacturers use (even if they are not technically "genuine parts"), and also instructions on that offer repair information, Along with the above, the special tools needed to do it safely are also released.

But if you do, you will lose the guarantee ...

Here comes the in legislation called “Right to Repair.”

California will then be the 18th state in the United States to propose a "Right to Repair" bill for electronic devices. The bill will require manufacturers to provide repair information, along with the necessary equipment and maintenance, at the disposal of product owners and independent repair shops.

Susan Talamantes Eggman has analyzed legislation aimed at giving more control to users. Instead of having to pay a very high price to a manufacturer to repair an electronic device, Eggman underlines that many are forced to make an early upgrade.

“The Right to Repair Act will give consumers the freedom to repair their electronics and their devices to a repair shop or service provider of their choice, a practice that was taken for granted a generation ago but is now increasingly rare in a world of planned obsolescence,” says Eggman.

Hopefully the bill will pass to California (and why not, as it sounds fair enough) to be adopted globally.

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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