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    Home » Oregon is about to sign — or veto — the strongest right-to-repair law yet
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    Oregon is about to sign — or veto — the strongest right-to-repair law yet

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    Oregon is about to sign — or veto — the strongest right-to-repair law yet
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    Oregon’s landmark right-to-repair law is practically right here — at this time, SB 1596 handed the Oregon legislature, and is headed to Governor Tina Kotek’s desk to sign or veto inside the subsequent 5 days. It’s a giant deal, as a result of the Oregon law can be the first to ban “parts pairing,” a observe the place corporations can preserve you from utilizing parts (typically even official ones) except that firm’s software program is happy that they belong.

    Similar to California’s right-to-repair law, the Oregon invoice additionally requires corporations to make the identical components, instruments, and restore paperwork accessible to any homeowners that it affords to licensed restore retailers, and with out charging any extra for them.

    It doesn’t specify plenty of years that corporations want to make these objects accessible, although — California mandates seven years, whereas the Oregon invoice suggests corporations might merely cease producing them. It additionally comes with typical carveouts for online game consoles, medical gadgets, HVAC tools, vitality storage, numerous sorts of engines… and electrical toothbrushes.

    Like California and Minnesota’s legal guidelines, it wouldn’t apply to telephones offered earlier than July 1st, 2021. But for all different devices, it goes all the means again to July 1st, 2015.

    The ban on components pairing wouldn’t apply to any current machine, although — solely client electronics manufactured after January 1st, 2025.

    We spoke with iFixit CEO Kyle Weins about components pairing, and the way the combat for right-to-repair was simply getting began, on this October episode of The Vergecast:

    Today, Weins says he’s “beyond proud of my home state for passing the strongest-yet electronics Right to Repair bill.”

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