🔍
Apple’s New Fix-It Policy Is Not The End For ‘Right To Repair’ - YouTube
Channel: CNBC
[0]
It was an exciting day at iFixit in November 2021 when Apple
announced its
[5]
decision to release genuine screen and battery replacements
and service manuals
[11]
for iPhones.
[12]
This is absolutely crazy.
[14]
I mean, many of us thought we would never see the day.
[16]
This push for consumer repairs from the previously reluctant
Apple could have a major
[22]
impact on the 'right to repair' landscape.
[24]
Right to repair is a movement that supports reforms which
make sure that
[29]
everybody has what we need to fix our modern equipment.
[33]
Everything from tablets to toasters to tractors.
[38]
I have a friend who's a farmer down the road here.
[40]
He has a full-time mechanic that works for him, and the
mechanic tells me if they have a transmission go out in
[44]
their F-150 pickup, they can change it.
[46]
If they have the same transmission go out in their tractor,
they can't.
[49]
They can physically install the transmission, but then they
need a special laptop to press the button to make it work,
[54]
and John Deere won't give them the tooling.
[56]
Despite the recent achievements, there is still a lot of
work to be done.
[66]
27 states have or are working on right to repair
legislation, and
[71]
President Biden signed an executive order in the summer of
2021, encouraging the
[76]
FTC to use its authority to address, quote, unfair
anti-competitive
[81]
restrictions on third party repairs or self repairs of
items such as the
[87]
restrictions imposed by powerful manufacturers that prevent
farmers from repairing their
[92]
own equipment.
[93]
This has not been a partisan issue.
[95]
We've had Nebraska is one of the first states that got on
board working on agriculture right to repair language.
[100]
Massachusetts has led the way with automotive right to
repair.
[102]
They've also been very active with electronics right to
repair.
[105]
The state of New York, it passed the Senate overwhelmingly
this year, a bipartisan vote.
[110]
California introduced a hospital focused medical right to
repair bill this year, so it's
[115]
really a spectrum of states across the country,
Republicans, Democrats coming together to
[121]
work on the common sense issue.
[122]
We spoke with Kyle Wiens at iFixit's headquarters before
Apple's big announcement, and caught up
[128]
with him after the announcement over Zoom.
[130]
I got to find my webcam.
[132]
We're seeing a huge amount of momentum where more and more
manufacturers want to do the right thing.
[137]
They want to get out in front.
[138]
They want to be...
[141]
they don't want to get caught by legislation.
[144]
Wiens, the co-founder and CEO of iFixit, started the
business about 18 years ago out
[149]
of frustration with Apple.
[151]
iFixit it started in the dorms at Cal Poly here in town.
[154]
I was trying to fix my laptop because I dropped on the
power plug, and it was damaged, and
[160]
I thought, 'well, I can open this up and fix it myself.'
Turns out I was woefully
[165]
mistaken. They're very complicated.
[167]
It's hard to take some of these things apart, and I
couldn't find instructions anywhere.
[171]
So I bumbled my way through the repair, and I learned
afterwards that the information had been online that
[176]
Apple's lawyers had taken it off the internet.
[178]
They sent DMCA takedowns to ban all of us from knowing how
to fix our things.
[182]
And that was frustrating.
[184]
So I decided, 'well, now I've done it once, I know how to
take it apart.
[188]
I'll take it apart again. We'll take some pictures, put
them online.' And the rest is history.
[192]
iFixit has been a key component in the fight for right to
repair legislation.
[197]
In the last year, Wiens and his allies have seen some major
successes.
[201]
We've had bills introduced in 27 different states.
[205]
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission, released a landmark
report this year analyzing the
[210]
manufacturer objections to repair and saying that there is
no substantive reason for any of their arguments against
[215]
local repair.
[216]
This report also points out that many Black owned small
businesses are in the repair and maintenance
[221]
industry, meaning anti-repair practices can
disproportionately affect small
[226]
businesses owned by people of color.
[231]
For many consumers, a cracked phone screen or a dying
battery in a laptop is top of
[236]
mind for repairability.
[238]
In 2017 alone, smartphone users broke more than 50 million
phone
[243]
screens. And Apple, America's favored smartphone
manufacturer by far
[248]
has been notoriously picky about who gets to repair those
devices.
[253]
Apple is always trying to do things to stop you from fixing
your own stuff.
[257]
They throw every impediment they can.
[260]
They don't share repair information, they refuse to sell
parts, they use special screwdrivers on the outside of your
[264]
phone. When you get a battery kit from us, it comes with
the screwdriver.
[268]
It comes with everything you need to do the repair.
[270]
That all changed with a recent announcement from the company
saying it will release repair data
[275]
along with genuine Apple parts and tools for customers to
repair their own products,
[281]
starting with the iPhone 12 and iPhone 13 lineups in 2022.
[285]
That's a total sea change.
[287]
Apple has never been willing to do that before, and that's
what legislation
[292]
is driving...
[293]
the right to repair legislation we're talking about says
you've got to make parts, tools and information available to
[298]
independents.
[299]
The products that we are making in, like the 1960s and 70s,
like the
[304]
assumption was that these are going to be like super
long-lasting lasting, durable.
[308]
Somehow, in the last 20 years, companies started, like,
putting all these whiz
[313]
bang nonsense features and things that then break and cause
the thing to break down.
[318]
That may be worked for a while, but the kind of bubble is
kind of pop down that.
[322]
It feels like a course correction, and the public was
pretty far out ahead of the manufacturers.
[328]
But now the manufacturers have started to realize that and
have started catching up.
[333]
But Apple is only one company representing one sector of the
right to repair movement.
[338]
Wiens and Proctor want people to be able to repair
everything they own.
[344]
Right to repair legislation across the country is tackling
tractor repairs, medical equipment
[349]
repairs and more.
[351]
Covid hit and shut down most of the state legislatures
across the country and
[357]
also highlighted medical right to repair as a really urgent
problem.
[362]
We wrote a report in 2020 called Hospital Repair
Restrictions about how hospitals had
[367]
ventilators they couldn't use because they couldn't access
the proprietary repair materials.
[372]
Manufacturers were refusing to give them
[374]
The most vocal opponents to right to repair legislation have
been Apple and John Deere.
[378]
If you look at John Deere, they forecast...
[380]
a large amount of their corporate profits come from their
service network, and if they can
[386]
monopolize the service economy and move more of that onto
their balance sheet and off of the local
[391]
mechanics, they will.
[393]
But that has a disruptive impact on local economies.
[396]
In a statement to CNBC, John Deere said, 'reprograming
software is needed in
[401]
less than two percent of all repairs, meaning that
customers can self repair nearly every
[406]
part of their machine.
[408]
We do not, however, support the modifications of embedded
software as they could
[413]
pose significant health and safety risks to customers and
the environment in line with
[418]
federal and state standards.' And Tesla has also been
criticized for not releasing
[423]
parts or service manuals, leaving owners reliant on Tesla
to service its cars,
[429]
although some states have passed laws to change that.
[433]
Apple has been joined by Microsoft and Dell, among others,
in upping its repairability
[438]
game.
[439]
Dell announced like a new, super repairable modular concept
laptop,
[445]
the Luna. And you know, there's been a couple of other
companies like this company called Framework, which
[450]
launched the most eminently repairable laptop you've ever
seen.
[454]
And now I feel like that's put pressure on some of the
other laptop manufacturers.
[458]
We're really jazzed about collaborating with Microsoft.
[461]
Microsoft has really turned a page from products that were
glued together, were very hard to work on.
[466]
Now they've said that they are making a public commitment
to repairability.
[469]
They're rethinking the designs of their products.
[471]
They're starting to release repair tools.
[474]
They signed the commitment to make tools and information
available to consumers by the end of next
[479]
year. So we think all of those are exactly steps in the
right direction.
[484]
We just have to make sure that they follow through.
[486]
Apple's initiatives, among other tech giants, show great
progress, but there is still a
[491]
lot of work to do to set us up for a fully repairable
future.
[496]
We should just be wary of, like unnecessary whiz bang
features that could ruin the
[501]
product's longevity.
[503]
We need to get smarter about reverse logistics, which
includes doing all the things that keeps things out of
[509]
the recycling stream so that the recycling stream can be
more efficient and effective.
[514]
I hope that we can get to a future where the default is
products are repairable and consumers don't have to
[519]
worry about it. Right now, you buy something expensive, is
it going to come with replacement parts?
[524]
Are you going to be able to get it repaired in five years?
[527]
It's a total unknown, and that's a shame.
[529]
Consumers should have certainty.
[530]
So absolutely, we need to push for a place where
manufacturers get to a default that's at least reasonable.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage