Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Apple to allow self-repairs

Company to launch online store to sell individual parts

- MATT O’BRIEN

The Federal Trade Commission, the Biden administra­tion and state legislatur­es have been eyeing regulatory changes that would make it easier for Americans to repair their broken devices.

Apple is letting some iPhone users fix their own phones, a sharp turnaround for a company that has long prohibited anyone except company-approved technician­s from fiddling with its proprietar­y parts and software.

The company said Wednesday that it will enable users of two of the newest iPhone models and eventually some Mac computers to get access to genuine Apple parts and tools for consumer repairs.

The shift reflects a strengthen­ing “right to repair” movement affecting everything from smartphone­s to cars and tractors. It’s a reaction to the infusion of software into more everyday products and the practices of manufactur­ers who have increasing­ly made those products difficult and expensive to repair.

Apple is launching an online store for self-service repairs early next year that it says will have more than 200 individual parts and tools for making the most common repairs on the iPhone 12 or iPhone 13. It will initially be focused on do-it-yourself fixes to screens, batteries and displays, which Apple previously resisted, citing concerns about security and safety, such as faulty battery replacemen­ts that can damage a device.

Apple’s action is welcome news for consumers and a sign that similar standards should apply to other electronic­s, said Maureen Mahoney, a senior policy analyst at Consumer Reports.

“If you buy a product, you should be able to fix it,” she said. Otherwise “consumers have to either rely on the manufactur­ers’ authorized repairer or they have to buy a new one.”

The Federal Trade Commission, the Biden administra­tion and state legislatur­es have been eyeing regulatory changes that would make it easier for Americans to repair their broken devices.

Regulators have expressed concerns about restrictio­ns that steer consumers into manufactur­ers’ and sellers’ repair networks, adding costs to consumers and shutting out independen­t repair shops from business opportunit­ies. They’ve also said those repair restrictio­ns often fall heavily on minority and low-income consumers. An FTC report to Congress in May noted that many Black-owned small businesses make equipment repairs, and repair shops often are owned by entreprene­urs from poor communitie­s.

Apple has long been a target for right-to-repair advocates because of its practice of locking down its software so parts are encoded to a specific device. Some attempted repairs — such as replacing a broken screen with one made by a third party — have left phones unusable.

There are limits to the changes that Apple is making but it’s still “a big milestone,” said Nathan Proctor, senior director for the Right to Repair campaign at U.S. Public Interest Research Group, a consumer advocacy group.

“One of the most visible right-to-repair opponents is reversing course in a meaningful way,” he said.

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