Oregon's state House has just passed by a 42 to 13 margin powerful right to repair legislation that ensures customers can get their stuff fixed anywhere. Once enshrined into state law, which now only requires the signature of the state governor, it will also put limits on parts pairing for all products manufactured from 2025 onwards, which will make it even easier to replace broken parts on haywire electronics without the manufacturer's official consent.
The legislation would require electronics manufacturers to make repairs easier for customers, such as with easy access to replacement parts, tools, and information on how to do it. It includes laptops, phones, and most standard electronics you'd expect, except for medical equipment, farm equipment, and video game consoles, notes iFixit.
The access to parts and processes is a pretty big win on its own, but the Oregon legislation also takes down a practice known as parts pairing.
Parts pairing is a way of limiting repairs to authorised service centres. Essentially, it means you can't take the same part off the shelf and replace it yourself, as even if you repaired it perfectly, the new part won't be fully compliant with the device, likely due to an unmatched serial number. In other words, if you replace your phone battery with another, as iFixit notes, the phone may recognise the swap and you may be locked out of some features. While most notably an issue affecting phone repairs, parts pairing could be used to justify similar action for gaming laptops or handhelds.
In terms of right to repair, parts pairing absolutely sucks. It also really damages independent repair shop owners who are unable to offer an equivalent service to the manufacturer. And that's why the legislation from Oregon that includes a limit on parts pairing for all devices sold from January 1, 2025 is being seen as a huge win by campaigners.
«The Right to Repair keeps getting stronger. Oregon has passed the best bill yet,» says PIRG right to repair
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