- cross-posted to:
- android@lemdro.id
- tech@kbin.social
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- android@lemdro.id
- tech@kbin.social
- technology@lemmy.world
The Android phone maker says go ahead, fix your own phone.
The right-to-repair movement continues to gain steam as another big tech company shows its support for letting people fix their own broken devices.
Google endorsed an Oregon right-to-repair legislation Thursday calling it a “common sense repair bill” and saying it would be a “win for consumers.” This marks the first time the Android phone maker has officially backed any right-to-repair law.
The ability to repair a phone, for example, empowers people by saving money on devices while creating less waste,” said Steven Nickel, devices and services director of operations for Google, in a blog post Thursday. “It also critically supports sustainability in manufacturing. Repair must be easy enough for anyone to do, whether they are technicians or do-it-yourselfers.”
In the Oregon repair bill, manufacturers will be required to provide replacement parts, software, physical tools, documentation and schematics needed for repair to authorized repair providers or individuals. The legislation covers any digital electronics with a computer chip although cars, farm equipment, medical devices, solar power systems, and any heavy or industrial equipment that is not sold to consumers are exempt from the bill.
Google has made strides in making its Pixel phones easier to fix. The company enabled a Repair Mode for the phones last month allowing the protection of data on the device while it’s being serviced. There’s also a diagnostic feature that helps determine if your Pixel phone is working properly or not. That said, Google’s Pixel Watch is another story as the company said in October it will not provide parts to repair its smartwatch.
Apple jumped on the right-to-repair bandwagon back in October. The iPhone maker showed its support for a federal law to make it easier to repair its phones after years of being a staunch opponent.
Where’s the catch?
just like Apple, limited models and limited parts. It will probably take till 2030 or something before it comes even close to being available “globally”.
The phones are designed to be be hard to repair. So it is obvious most people won’t be doing this themselves. Which was the dream.
Taking the repair monopoly from the big corp and distributing it across small businesses is still a win.
It has been like this for years. This changes nothing imo. Small shops have always repaired phones.
The real issue will be to break their monopoly/duopoly/oligopoly at some point so we can again start doing real business instead of a handful companies ruling the world.
except that’s not happening. It’s giving big tech good PR while they keep doing exactly what they have been doing for the past 2+ years (i.e. pretending to care about right to repair, and the environment, and whatever other good-soundign cause they can think of, without actually doing any of it)
Google is just looking for good PR because their plan is to sell assemblies instead of individual parts. As an example, say on the phone’s motherboard a particular chip died, instead of replacing just that one piece Google wants to to sell you a whole new board at a cost so high that most people would probably consider just buying a new phone instead. They even attack Apple by suggesting governments should ban part pairing so they can look like the good guys.
https://youtu.be/rV5bBSZX00E
Exactly! This is just a PR stunt, nothing more, and it looks like “journalists” bought it.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/rV5bBSZX00E
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
The catch is in the title. Google will not back a law that will otherwise completely block them, instead of just making things different for them.
Google will comply with the law, but we all know they will do so in the most minimal ways or find loops to exploit it, even.
The catch is repairing a Google phone, even running a custom OS like GrapheneOS, doesn’t circumvent the lowest levels of their insidious tentacles that extract your information. They feel comfortable in letting you think you’re taking control.
Not that most other manufacturers are any better. Maybe a couple are, but they’re the ones that are still being sidelined, one way or another.
As a daily: fairphone As a tinker devide: pinephone
Those should do it.
Why would Google care? They just want you to buy apps and look at ads, I don’t think their phone business is a huge part of their income. So why would this be a hill for them to die on?