'We're Winning': Apple Formally Endorses Right to Repair Legislation After 
Spending Millions Fighting It

By Jason Koebler  AUG 23, 2023 
https://www.404media.co/apple-endorses-california-right-to-repair-bill/


In a letter from its lobbyist, Apple 'urges' California lawmakers to pass the 
strongest right-to-repair law in the country.

Apple told a California legislator that it is formally supporting a right to 
repair bill in California, a landmark move that suggests big tech manufacturers 
understand they have lost the battle to monopolize repair, and need to allow 
consumers and independent repair shops to fix their own electronics.

“Apple writes in support of SB 244, and urges members of the California 
legislature to pass the bill as currently drafted,” Apple wrote to Susan 
Eggman, the sponsor of the bill, in a letter obtained by 404 Media. “We support 
SB 244 because it includes requirements that protect individual users’ safety 
and security, as well as product manufacturers’ intellectual property. We will 
continue to support the bill, so long as it continues to provide protections 
for customers and innovators.”

This is a landmark shift in policy from Apple, the most powerful electronics 
manufacturer in the world and, historically, one of the biggest opponents of 
right to repair legislation nationwide.

It means, effectively, that consumers have won. The news was first reported by 
TechCrunch and iFixit.

“If California votes yes and continues to raise the bar on electronics repair 
from other states, it’s becoming obvious the fight is over, and that we’ve 
won,” Nathan Proctor, Senior Director of consumer rights group U.S. PIRG 
Campaign for the Right to Repair, told me. “It’s going to be show over for 
consumer electronics. There are other industries where this fight is going to 
continue, but if a strong bill passes in California, we’re winning.”

In May, the Right to Repair Act passed the California Senate 38-0. It has not 
yet been voted on in the State Assembly, but Apple’s support, in its home 
state, makes passage more likely.

Over the last year, right to repair legislation for consumer electronics has 
been enacted by New York (though that bill was watered down at the last minute 
by Gov. Kathy Hochul) and Minnesota.

The legislation would require manufacturers “to make available, on fair and 
reasonable terms, to product owners, service and repair facilities, and service 
dealers, the means, as described, to effect the diagnosis, maintenance, or 
repair of the product.”

This means manufacturers have to make the same diagnostics, tools, and parts 
available to the public as they make available to their own authorized repair 
professionals.

In its letter, Apple says it will support the bill as passed, so long as it 
continues to require independent repair professionals to disclose the use of 
“non-genuine or used parts” to customers and does not require companies to 
create new documentation for repairs that its own authorized providers don’t 
already do.

The goal for right to repair advocates has been to pass legislation in a series 
of states, leading to total capitulation by manufacturers unwilling to spend 
money lobbying against bills in dozens of states and terrified of having to 
comply with different legislation in different states.

A law in California, the heart of the tech sector with a population of nearly 
40 million people and support from Apple, is likely to become defacto national 
legislation.

A similar thing happened with the auto industry when, after Massachusetts 
passed a right-to-repair law for cars, manufacturers agreed to abide by the law 
in all 50 states.

“I would think that passage in California means there’d be a lot of pressure on 
manufacturers to kind of set the line there and say ‘no farther,’ because we’ve 
now proven to them we can pass laws and change the ways they have to operate,” 
Proctor said.

“This shows state advocacy is a good way to deal with large problems that are 
hard to get through Congress. It shows you can really spread big tech thin if 
you have a real grassroots network behind you.”

Apple’s move represents a sea change from where the tech giant was just several 
years ago, when its lobbyists were telling lawmakers that allowing consumers to 
repair their iPhones would turn specific states into a “Mecca” for hackers and 
bad actors.

Apple and other electronics manufacturers, represented by large industry 
lobbying groups, have spent millions fighting right to repair legislation, 
which would require them to make repair manuals, parts, and tools available to 
the general public.

Slowly but surely, thanks to activists and consumers, as well as support from 
the Biden administration, manufacturers have realized that they need to take 
steps to make repair more accessible.

Microsoft, Apple, Google, Motorola, and Samsung have all introduced ways to 
purchase parts directly from the company or from authorized third parties like 
iFixit.

While this is a huge step forward for the right to repair consumer electronics, 
the fight will rage on in other industries.

Agricultural giants like John Deere and medical equipment manufacturers still 
hold great power to prevent consumers and independent repair shops from fixing 
equipment due to an inability to get parts and artificial software and 
diagnostics locks that keep customers out.

--
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to