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Christopher Hutton, Technology Reporter


NextImg:Apple to make tools and parts required for 'right to repair' available nationwide


Apple will provide independent repair shops with the parts, tools, and instructions to fix its gadgets, a 180-degree turn on the company's position regarding the "right to repair."

The White House will announce on Tuesday that Apple will outline plans to provide the components and tools needed to fix its products to independent merchants. IPhones and iPads were previously restricted to Apple-approved vendors for repair, making it difficult for most users to fix their own products. California signed a law earlier this month that set the stage for these policies.

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"[Apple's new policy] means that whether you are in California, Maine or Michigan, Apple will make the parts, tools, and documentation needed to repair your Apple products available to you at reasonable prices, as outlined in the California law," National Economic Council Director Lael Brainard said in remarks prepared for an event promoting the "right to repair," which is the ability of users to fix their own products with their own parts, according to Reuters.

California, Colorado, Minnesota, and New York have already passed "right to repair" legislation, Brainard noted, and 30 other states are considering similar legislation. Apple endorsed the California law, surprising a lot of "right to repair" advocates. Apple is now supporting national "right to repair" legislation, Brainard said.

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Brainard's push for the "right to repair" is part of President Joe Biden's initiative to promote competition and crack down on so-called junk fees and other actions that jack up prices for consumers.

State lawmakers began to introduce "right to repair" bills in the 2000s after several manufacturers began adopting practices that made acquiring automotive replacement parts difficult to acquire by restricting access. The first law was passed in Massachusetts in 2012, requiring automakers to sell the same service parts and diagnostics directly to consumers or mechanics as they did to dealerships.