Did you know that Apple can tell if you break your
iPhone screen and take it to get fixed by somebody who isn't in Apple's
authorized repair network and uses a non-Apple screen to fix it? Not only can they tell, they can
intentionally disable your phone when they find out.
That's exactly what happened to Antonio Olmos, a news
photographer covering the refugee crisis in the Balkans, when he broke his
iPhone screen and couldn't find an Apple-authorized repair facility in
Macedonia. But he did find
somebody who fixed it with an aftermarket screen, and the phone worked fine
until a routine sofware update a few months later. Then, wham—Apple turned his phone off. When Olmos inquired, he was told that
Apple did this as a "security measure" in case some of the
unauthorized parts were defective.
But that wasn't the problem—the phone worked fine until Apple broke it
in an act that looks suspiciously like punishment.
Olmos had enough connections with the media to raise a
public stink about the issue, and eventually Apple caved and quit turning off
phones that have been repaired by non-Apple facilities with non-Apple
parts. But with his inquiry, Olmos
turned over a rock to reveal just one of the many ways that manufacturers are
increasingly trying to discourage repairs of their products by anyone other
than their own limited number of authorized repair facilities—and sometimes not
even then.
In an article on the website of the professional
engineering magazine IEEE Spectrum,
two leaders of the "right-to-repair" movement, Kyle Wiens and Gay
Gordon-Byrne, describe how this is happening, not only with consumer
electronics but with items as big as tractors. For example, John Deere, the agricultural-equipment maker,
took the position that in selling a tractor to a farmer, the company didn't
really let go of the tractor—they only granted an "implied license"
to operate it. John Deere reserved
the right to repair it or say who was going to repair it—certainly not the
farmer.
This didn't sit well with farmers, who complained, and
the U. S. Copyright Office ruled that John Deere was wrong—when a farmer buys a
tractor, he can do anything he wants with it, from fixing it himself to driving
it into a lake.
These are only two of the most egregious examples of
manufacturers who try to discourage consumers from fixing their own stuff, or
using independent repair shops who use aftermarket parts. As anyone who has been to a non-dealer-owned
auto repair shop or an Autozone knows, independent repair facilities are often
cheaper than dealerships and can do work of just as good a quality as the dealerships. And many aftermarket parts are
comparable in quality to OEM (original equipment manufacturer) parts. So why do the makers seem to hate it if
you fix something of theirs that breaks?
Well, the obvious reason is that as soon as a company
sells you one of their products, they are competing with themselves. If the product breaks, you have two
choices, in principle: fixing it
or buying a new one. The maker
wants to sell you a new one, of course, and anything that can be done to make
fixing difficult or impossible will tend to tilt your decision in the direction
of a new purchase.
This helps a maker's bottom line, but it also
contributes to the millions of tons of electronic scrap that goes into
landfills worldwide every year. As
economist John C. Médaille put it, "Only by constantly buying what we
don't need or already have can the system sustain itself; the size of the
garbage dump becomes the true measure of our 'wealth'." So what should be done?
The answer that Wiens and Gordon-Byrne favor is
legislation at the state level to prohibit manufacturers from monopolizing
product repair or preventing it altogether. While this has some chance of working, it is only part of
the problem.
The things a culture values can tell you a lot about the
culture. Multinational
corporations have encouraged the development of a worldwide consumer culture
that values things that the corporations can sell at a profit. And in the absence of strong
counterforces from custom, religion, or politics, the consumer culture
increasingly dominates the lives of not just millions, but closer to billions
of people. In 2016, almost two-thirds
of the world's population owned a mobile phone. That's about the same percentage of the globe's population
who, as of 2013, do not have indoor
plumbing (flush toilets, in other words).
Now don't get me wrong—having a smart phone, or any kind of a phone, is
a huge leap forward toward all sorts of civilizational goods: the ability to call for emergency
services, to participate in a market economy, and so on. Mobile phones can on occasion be
lifesavers. But so can flush
toilets. There are good reasons,
however, that Apple is in the smart-phone business and not the flush-toilet
business.
State laws protecting our right to fix things can
redress some of the grievous wrongs that companies are trying to put across
with regard to product repairs. But
even if all service manuals were posted for free on the Internet and you could
find a competent independent repair shop in every city and town, many of us
would still be just waiting for our phone to break down to give us an excuse to
buy a new one.
This is a moral issue, really, and to explore its depths
would take us far beyond the limits of this blog space. But the heart of the matter is whether
we believe what the manufacturers want us to believe, namely (as Médaille again
puts it), "that our happiness lies not in persons, but in things, and not
merely in things, but in constantly new things."
That notion is, to put it indelicately, a lie. But it's behind much of the advertising
and marketing that we are subjected to all the time. Until we recognize that lie for what it is, and change our
ways of living and using our resources to reflect our realization that it's a
lie, all the repair-protection laws in the world won't make much difference in
the flood of electronics that goes from store to user to garbage dump faster
every year.
Sources: The article "Why We Must Fight For
the Right to Repair Our Electronics" by Kyle Wiens and Gay Gordon-Byrne
was posted on the IEEE Spectrum
website on Oct. 24, 2017 at https://spectrum.ieee.org/green-tech/conservation/why-we-must-fight-for-the-right-to-repair-our-electronics. The statistic on worldwide mobile phone
use is from https://www.statista.com/statistics/274774/forecast-of-mobile-phone-users-worldwide/,
and
the one on flush toilets is from http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/02/22/_60_percent_of_the_world_population_still_without_toilets.html. John C. Médaille's book Toward a Truly Free Market (ISI Books,
2010), pp. 194-195, is the source of the quotations attributed to him.
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