Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Youtube Apple

The Tinkerers Fighting Apple's War on YouTube 'Repair' Videos (theguardian.com) 154

The Guardian profiles stay-at-home mom Jessa Jones, who taught herself how to fix her daughter's iPhone with online tutorials, eventually leading to motherboard repair work that she found through eBay.

"After recruiting other stay-at-home moms in her neighborhood and teaching them electronics repair, she launched a small business from her dining room called MommyFixits. 'Suddenly our play dates became moms sitting around the dining table fixing mailed-in iPhones,' she told me." As Jones's expertise grew, she discovered that technology manufacturers used underhanded techniques to discourage independent repair. Phone and tablet parts were glued together, causing components to break when pried apart. Schematics and manuals were copyrighted and kept under trade secret. Apple even used their own proprietary "pentalobe" screws, which cannot be removed with common screwdrivers. Despite these barriers to repair, Jones knew that fixing things independently, instead of taking them back to the manufacturer, was almost always possible and often cheaper. To spread her knowledge, she started a YouTube channel called iPad Rehab, which offered step-by-step repair tutorials for other DIY enthusiasts...

According to Nathan Proctor, director of the Campaign for the Right to Repair at the US Public Interest Research Group, this YouTube community is an integral part of a broader political movement that is attempting to wrest consumer agency from an increasingly consolidated electronics marketplace. Proctor says that while in the past there was a legal balance between protecting manufacturers' intellectual property and empowering consumers to tinker with, modify, and repair their own products, the rise of software in electronics has shifted power to manufacturers. Not only are the products more complex and harder to fix, the line between self-repair and hacking has become nebulous, meaning that manufacturers have been able to use digital copyright law to gain a legal monopoly over repair. This, in turn, has created a broader cultural anxiety around self-repair, a sense that when our devices malfunction, the problem can only be dealt with by so-called experts at a specific company.

According to Proctor, YouTube channels such as Jones's are useful in disrupting this dynamic. "I frequently will talk to people who had something break on their phone and were told that they had to replace it with the manufacturer," he said. "But then they go on YouTube and watch a video and realize that fixing it isn't impossible, that you could learn how to or find someone who can." As a result of this, those at the forefront of the online repair community are sometimes met with hostility from manufacturers. Apple has brought suits against unauthorized repair shops and have had their intellectual property lawyers directly contact some YouTube tinkerers.

"What we're giving up when we lose the right to repair," Jones tells the Guardian, "is this sense of investigation and wonder and tinkering.

"We're made to see our devices as if they are these sacrosanct objects but really, they're just a battery and a screen, something that a stay-at-home mom can learn how to fix in her dining room."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

The Tinkerers Fighting Apple's War on YouTube 'Repair' Videos

Comments Filter:
  • Who Paid For It? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    If Apple wants to buy me an iPhone I'll refrain from repairing it myself. If I put up the cash its mine and they can piss right off. If they want to own it then they can own the cost of ownership.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 12, 2019 @09:09PM (#58580772)

    Its about who really owns the devices that we buy. We pay for these devices, so we own them. Bbut companies like (Cr)apple and Sony, (and many others) are trying to say that even though we paid for our devices, they still own them, and have the right to tell us what we can and acn't do with them! This is of course false! I guess we need nation-wide right to repair laws that include forcing manufacturers to make it easy to replace batteries, and NOT glue things together! Also, schematics, repair manuals, and parts need to be made available. Schematics and repair manual for free, and parts for reasonable prices!

    • Ultrasonic welds are much stronger than glue anyhow. That's what they will do if they can no longer use glue... so it can be water resistant to 1cm.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        They still have to fix the devices still under warranty so that would make it really expensive to fix. They want to make repair as hard as possible for the layman but easy enough for their techs.

      • It's also used on every single laptop battery I've ever seen,making it very difficult to replace the cells within when they inevitably run out of useful life. I'm not sure if this is an anti-repair effort, or a legal cover-thy-arse measure to stop a shoddy repair from making the laptop ignite and the manufacturer getting the blame.

        • It's a low cost effort. It has nothing to do with any of that other stuff. It's just a lot cheaper and more reliable to sonic weld the battery enclosure than to close it by any other means. They are highly unlikely to get you to buy another name brand battery anyway, and they know it. There's nothing special about those batteries, and they know we know it.

      • so it can be water resistant to 1cm.

        I was going to ask how they waterproof all the ports...

      • I learnt on the U-tubes that you can fix a cracked screen by putting it in the microwave. Apple doesn't want you to know this trick.

        Sealed phones provide advantages to the consumer as well as inconveniencing the the right to repair sector.

        1. They can use more economical construction methods making the cost lower to me. e.g. glue and welds versus screws and snaps.
        2. They can use more compact assembly methods make the phone potentially lighters, stronger or have more room for battery
        3. They don't have to

        • 3. They don't have to worry about the PR nightmare of a "repaired" iphone with a flaming bad battery bringing down a 747 of screaming passengers.

          All of the flaming battery incidents I've heard of involved the original battery, probably mostly because they made it harder to replace them. Do you recall any battery incidents which can be attributed to replacement batteries?

          I did a battery replacement on a Nexus 7 with the cheapest possible replacement, and it's been working a treat since.

        • You can increase security massively by denying root on laptops and PCs as well. This is a road that one could go down all day long, This would increase that. Heck, daily home inspections by the government could really keep people safe. What weâ(TM)re talking about is private property rights, and yes, things would be more secure if nobody had any. But ...
    • by Shikaku ( 1129753 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @09:28PM (#58580846)

      We should totally let them do it: you don't own the device, but they have to repair it for free for 3 years, no matter what, because it's theirs and not yours.

      • by Falos ( 2905315 )

        While we're at it let's have the cost reflect that we're renting.

      • but they have to repair it for free for 3 years, no matter what, because it's theirs and not yours.

        Why are you limiting it to three years?

      • We should totally let them do it: you don't own the device, but they have to repair it for free for 3 years, no matter what, because it's theirs and not yours.

        And upgrade with free labor?

      • We should totally let them do it: you don't own the device, but they have to repair it for free for 3 years, no matter what, because it's theirs and not yours.

        Now there's an idea.Thumbs up.

    • Bbut companies like (Cr)apple and Sony, (and many others)

      Not all devices from Sony.
      For their phones, they have:
      (Software wise)
      - an "open device" program, letting you unlock the bootloader, download the drivers and install all the crap you want (even non-android OS like Jolla's Sailfish OS)
      (Hardware wise)
      - the shell is glued in (boo!), but inside it's pretty modular and you can easily order necessary parts.

      • > an "open device" program,

        Yeah, that permanently and forever fucks up the camera's ability to work in low-light conditions (among other things) once you use their official tool to unlock the phone. Because, for god knows what stupid reason, they put the imaging sensor's advanced-mode firmware in the "protected" area that gets blown away when you unlock the phone.

        It's like they just couldn't stop themselves from taking one last vindictive swipe at their customers after giving them their alleged freedom,

  • by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @01:34AM (#58581456)

    Apple can stick its pentalobe screws up its pentalobe butt.

    • What do you have against pentalobe screws? Most hardware stores have all the screwdrivers and bit sets you need. I actually prefer the pentalobes because the screwdrivers fits into them a lot more snugly. Cross heads tend to turn into circular pits rather rapidly. Whenever I need screws, I always look for pentalobes first and only buy cross heads if no pentalobes are available. I don't know where the myth originated that this was something invented by Apple to make repairs more difficult.

      • I don't know where the [myth] originated that this was something invented by Apple to make repairs more difficult.

        Oh, I don't know, maybe the term tamper resistant? [wikipedia.org] If moneygrubber Apple hates being known as a bad actor, maybe it should stop acting badly.

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by gnasher719 ( 869701 )

          Oh, I don't know, maybe the term tamper resistant? [wikipedia.org] If moneygrubber Apple hates being known as a bad actor, maybe it should stop acting badly.

          Total nonsense. Pentalobe isn't temper resistant. It's just a different screw driver, which is easy enough to buy. What it does is to keep clueless idiots from opening their devices where they will only cause damage. It filters out idiots who are too stupid to find a place that sells a pentalobe screw driver, which is a good thing.

          Proper temper resistant screws cannot be unscrewed at all. There are some that you can screw in with a normal flat blade screw driver, but the head is at an angle, so if you tr

      • by Lonewolf666 ( 259450 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @04:31AM (#58581954)

        It is yet another kind if screw which makes the list of tools you need longer.
        Ever heard of Torx? Six lobes and otherwise pretty much the same advantages as pentalobes. And Torx is a widely accepted industry standard.
        Pentalobe is resundant and only serves Apples desire to have something different that makes independent repair more of a hassle.

    • Where do you buy your tools, the shit-for-brains store?

      Search on amazon for a "computer tool kit", or just buy the set from iFixit, masters of the "unrepairable" devices.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @06:31AM (#58582362) Homepage Journal

        Why is it acceptable to use special screws that force you to buy special tools, when standard ones would work just fine?

        Screws are only the half of it. iFixIt sell a special glue heater because modern Apple products are made from about 30% glue. Not the kind you can easily remove either, e.g. other manufacturers use pull tab adhesive strips to keep the battery in place which.

        Only badly designed electronics used to be that way. Now it's become normal, although Apple is still one of the worst offenders (along with Microsoft, whose glue content is even higher). This is not acceptable.

      • Where do you buy your tools, the shit-for-brains store?

        The kind of loser that shouldn't be allowed to open their iPhone, or any other phone, because they are only going to mess it up.

  • by sad_ ( 7868 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @05:52AM (#58582168) Homepage

    it's pretty simple, don't buy those unfixable devices.
    if you do, then apparently you don't have an issue with them being unfixable and other features are higher up the list of what you want in a device.
    there is only one language they will understand, and that's money.

  • Apple makes it hard to use knock off potentially inferior parts. There are big Co compliance challenges for RoHs, Basel convention hazardous waste etc... Product liability that can help rationalize some of the actions. Apple for instance also desires nice repair centers and services that comply but expect not to be over run by low cost competition that does not comply. AirBnB vs Hotel. Apple should weigh allowing more small outfits vs the big dealer compliance over head. The tougher part is loosening repa
  • Apple products have gotten to small and complex for the average person to repair. Putting an SSD in a 10 year old Mac mini was quite involved - I canâ(TM)t imagine trying to gut a recent iphone, reassemble it properly, and actually have the damn thing work.
  • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Monday May 13, 2019 @08:00AM (#58582848) Homepage

    I just buy phones from companies that offer spare parts, have compatible parts available, and where all the consumables are replaceable.

    I find that much easier, voting with my wallet, than pissing about breaking hardware I own to do things like replace the battery.

    • by kwalker ( 1383 )

      Okay, and who are these mythical, friendly companies? I'm genuinely curious and would also like to throw them some business.

  • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday May 13, 2019 @10:00AM (#58583564) Homepage Journal

      I am developing an interest in electronics. The more I read, the more I discover about the hazards introduced by the various components (such as capacitors, floating scopes, etc. etc. etc.) and just hooking up stuff willy-nilly.

      The only dangerous things in modern computers are backlight inverters and batteries. Caps big enough to kill you last appeared in monitors, although there may be some in laser printers. Backlight inverters themselves are rapidly disappearing, since monitors are mostly using LED backlights now.

      If we make it illegal to make it super duper hard to replace the battery (e.g. by gluing it in) and require that all flammable batteries have overload protection, then the battery won't be dangerous either.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      That is some retarded shit. There is no hazard in fucking with low voltage electronics. Don't short circuit a naked Li-Ioncell. Other than that you'll just brick the device. Which already wasn't working. Get out of here

  • Most people don't remember the widespread leasing days for home appliances. Most manufacturers preferred to get 100% of the money up front by selling their devices. Then they tried to write warranties in a way to have their cake and eat it too, but Congress passed the MagMoss Act of 1975 (you don't have to provide a warranty, but you do it has to work). What needs to be fixed are US Copyright laws, now that so many devices (including cars) require software.
  • While not right-to-repair yourself per-se, but the Moss-Magnuson Act allows you to get your products serviced by third parties. Apple (and most companies) flagrantly violate this act on a daily, if not minutely basis. Basically, laws in the consumer favor are summarily ignored, while those in the companies favor can get you thrown in jail. Ever notice that when you do something to a company, itâ(TM)s criminal, but when a company does something to you, it civil.
  • It's interesting to point out that Apple was started by two guys who were "hackers". well, the one who built the first Apple computers was. Steve Wozniak started out as a Phreaker, building little circuits to send groups of tone's through the PSTN and AT&T's network, that would allow him to bypass toll restrictions and make long distance calls for free. Later he took his knowledge of computer circuits and the current state of mini/micro computers like the Altair 8800 and designed something new. This
  • Is require companies wait long enough for a person to reasonably read an agreement before allowing them to click âagreeâ(TM). Of course, most companies would go out of business if they did so. Their entire existence depends on people not reading them. So much for good-faith.

You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.

Working...