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The Right To Repair Movement Is Forcing Apple To Change (vice.com)

The executive director of Repair.org says Apple has "decided to be nicer to consumers in order to stop them from demanding their right to repair," according to Motherboard. Slashdot reader Jason Koebler shared this article: It's increasingly looking like Apple can no longer ignore the repair insurgency that's been brewing: The right to repair movement is winning, and Apple's behavior is changing. In the last few months, Apple has made political, design, and customer service decisions that suggest the right to repair movement is having a real impact on the company's operations...

Apple has repeatedly made small concessions to its customers on the issues that Repair.org and the larger repair community have decided to highlight. The question is whether these concessions are going to be enough to satiate customers who want their devices to be easily repairable and upgradable, and whether the right to repair movement can convince those people to continue demanding fair treatment.

The article notes that at least 12 U.S. states are still considering "fair repair" laws, which would force Apple to sell replacement parts to both independent repair shops and the general public.

2 of 165 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Repairing? What about PROGRAMMING? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Every time I read a book, I run into plot problems that I'd like to correct and re-publish. Recognize my "right" to repair that that crap too, amirite?

  2. Re:Anti-Apple Bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    This. I work for Microsoft, and I'm ashamed how we now require our devices to be destroyed to open them up. Epoxy is great for reliability, but when you have to break components to open them up, that's just going too far. That is why I just ordered a new iPad 10.5" rather than a Surface even though I get an employee discount.