Call: 919.694.3298 (919.NWIDA.98) | Email: info@nwida.org

National Wireless Independent Dealer Association

FTC Takes a Big Step to R2R

Great news from Washington, DC today, and a giant step forward in Right-To-Repair (R2R) when the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) published an in-depth report looking at how product repair restrictions from manufacturers, negatively impact consumers and small businesses in various ways.

In other words, they are FOR Right to Repair!

Titled Nixing the Fix the report covers a many of the methods that companies use to limit the ability for customers and independent business to repair their products.

The report found that even when a warranty does not explicitly require that repairs be performed by the original manufacturer, many manufacturers restrict independent repair and repair by consumers, especially with mobile phone and car manufacturers. The report includes the following restrictions: 

  • Product designs that complicate or prevent repair
  • Unavailability of parts and repair information
  • Designs that make independent repairs less safe
  • Policies or statements that steer consumers to manufacturer repair networks
  • Application of patent rights and enforcement of trademarks
  • Disparagement of non-OEM parts and independent repair
  • Software locks and firmware updates

Manufacturers argue that these restrictions exist to protect intellectual property and prevent injuries. They claim opening up repair access would undermine the safety and security of their products.

After evaluating manufacturers’ explanations for the repair restrictions, the FTC found scant evidence to support them.

The report continues:

Many consumer products have become harder to fix and maintain. Repairs today often require specialized tools, difficult-to-obtain parts, and access to proprietary diagnostic software. Consumers whose products break then have limited choices.

Furthermore, the burden of repair restrictions may fall more heavily on communities of color and lower-income communities. Many Black-owned small businesses are in the repair and maintenance industries, and difficulties facing small businesses can disproportionately affect small businesses owned by people of color.

In the conclusion of the report, which was carried out at the direction of Congress and submitted with unanimous consent, the FTC pledges to address what it perceives as unfair restrictions by pursuing “appropriate law enforcement and regulatory options, as well as consumer education, consistent with our statutory authority.”

The FTC also suggests that consumers can help to redress the balance by reporting when manufacturers aren’t obeying the existing rules regarding repairs.

 
NWIDA members, contact us today if you need our assistance and if you’re not yet a member, we invite you to join today.
Want news like this delivered to your inbox? Click HERE Email pic - NWIDA
Want news like this in your RSS feed? Click HERE RSS Logo - NWIDA
Want news like this delivered to your Alexa Flash Briefing? Click HERE Alexa Logo - NWIDA
Join us on Reddit – Click HERE
paid ad:

Have any Question or Comment?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I accept that my given data and my IP address is sent to a server in the USA only for the purpose of spam prevention through the Akismet program.More information on Akismet and GDPR.

I’m Ready to join

Not Ready to Join?

Donate to NWIDA today!


Please send more information





Paid Ad: