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posted by janrinok on Monday January 29 2018, @02:35AM   Printer-friendly
from the and-so-it-begins dept.

A number of states are considering right to repair bills, legislation which if passed would make it easier for individuals and repair shops to replace or repair electronics parts. Repair.org reports that 17 states have already introduced bills this year and while most aim to make repair parts and manuals accessible, Washington's proposed legislation would straight up ban electronics that prevent easy repair. "Original manufacturers of digital electronic products sold on or after January 1, 2019, in Washington state are prohibited from designing or manufacturing digital electronic products in such a way as to prevent reasonable diagnostic or repair functions by an independent repair provider," says the bill. "Preventing reasonable diagnostic or repair functions includes permanently affixing a battery in a manner that makes it difficult or impossible to remove."

[...] Naturally, tech groups have jumped to make their opposition clear. In a letter to Morris, groups such as the Consumer Technology Association, the Telecommunications Industry Association and the Computer Technology Industry Association said the bill was "unwarranted" and added, "With access to technical information, criminals can more easily circumvent security protections, harming not only the product owner but also everyone who shares their network."

Source: Engadget


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Aiwendil on Tuesday January 30 2018, @12:27AM

    by Aiwendil (531) on Tuesday January 30 2018, @12:27AM (#630117) Journal

    Start to work in infrastructure - this is the norm there (well, is in western europe anyway). The flipside is that mistakes are considered small if they end up with only a few millions in incurred costs to society.

    Were I work the praxis for the last couple of decades has been to always demand that we get the copyright (or be allowed unlimted internal copies and unlimited modification for internal use and use with contractors and their subcontractors) on every piece of documentation we get our hands on, and most of it are produced in-house (I actually create lots of the documentation - which is kinda funny since I don't have clearance for most documentation nor for visiting the archive [quite a bit of documentation has been created by me taking a few hours with a camera and photographing _everything_ installed and then creating docs from images]). This is pretty much a sideeffect of our stuff needing to be around for decades.

    Oh also, here in sweden physical documents are getting rare (both private and at work), so when you'd normally just ask someone to mail you a few binders of documentation you now just get an email with pdf:s instead (surprisingly many companies has full-duplex ADF-scanners) - there is a perverse sense of schizotech in getting a freshly created PDF of documentation that states the equipment needed is "an Intel 80386 or compatible with math co-processor, DOS5.0 or higher, and an RS-232 port". (This explains why being cashless isn't a major issue here - here cash just was something that got properly digitized late in the game)

    Have you tried asking the boss if you are allowed to set up an internal "best practices archive" where people document what they've done? Normally that tends to transfer all the information without transferring the documents themselves while being easier to sell to paranoid management. Or maybe an archive of the current state of your equipment?
    And I really hope he enjoys never being allowed to turn off his phone - that is what indispensible really means, being on-call 24/7/365.24

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