Although today there are technology companies fighting that users have the right to repair their technological products from home or with technical service, other companies refuse to allow this to occur, as with Apple and other tech giant companies that find that users can harm themselves from Repair their own products.

At present, many users who want to repair their iPhones or who wish to fix them from technicians or using an unauthorized technical service find that the problem with the original parts of the phone is that unless you go to an authorized dealer or Apple Store, Very much find the damaged original patches to replace for your iPhone.
Reason? Apple considers that repairing the phone or any other product of its own could be dangerous to those who do so. And that this week a vote would have been taken to pass a bill that forced manufacturers to sell genuine spare parts for repairs at very low prices so that everyone had the "right to reform".
However, Apple and CompTIA, an organization representing major technology companies in the United States, have pretended to convince legislators of the dangers of phone repair from technicians or unauthorized technical service, especially with batteries, because they said that their bad status could generate serious burns the phone.
Thanks to this implication, the proposed law was not approved, leaving the right to reform at the discretion of the companies.
For many experts, ironically, it means not forcing large companies to sell genuine spare parts at affordable prices to users and technical services that can avoid corporate business.

So users are forced to buy pieces that usually come from China, a position that is more dangerous for users. Of course there is always the option of moving directly to the official technical service of the company, but the repair prices are often so great that even for a little extra you can buy a new phone instead of repairing your phone.
At present, the only company that offers the right to repair and offers a low-priced repair toolkit and free repair manuals is Motorola, but it's hard to see that other large companies will follow this path.

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