FTC warns PC manufacturers Asrock, Zotac, and Gigabyte that consumers have the right to repair

Skye Jacobs

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Staff
Why it matters: Even though federal and many state laws give consumers the right to repair products they have purchased, manufacturers like to control the repair process because it provides a significant revenue stream. The Federal Trade Commission tries to stay on top of illegal practices such as warranties that are voided if someone else has repaired an item, but there are a slew of legal actions manufacturers take that make consumer repairs as difficult as possible.

The right to repair movement may be gaining traction, with several states passing laws that force companies to improve the repairability of their products, but a trio of letters the Federal Trade Commission just sent to firms that market and sell gaming PCs, graphics chips, motherboards, and other accessories show that resistance by manufacturers is as strong as ever.

The Federal Trade Commission staff has sent letters to Asrock, Zotac, and Gigabyte warning that their warranty practices may be violating consumers' right to repair products they have purchased. Namely, the commission singled out the use of stickers containing "warranty void if removed" or similar language as illegal. These are usually placed on products in such a way that makes it difficult for consumers to perform routine maintenance and repairs on their products, the FTC said.

"These warning letters put companies on notice that restricting consumers' right to repair violates the law," said Samuel Levine, Director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "The commission will continue our efforts to protect consumers' right to repair and independent dealers' right to compete."

The letters told the manufacturers to change their warranties and review customer support practices.

Illegal warranties are just the tip of the problem, consumer advocates say, as manufacturers try all sorts of tactics to control the repair process – and these tactics are working. Americans waste $40 billion each year from not being able to repair products, according to a report by the US PIRG, a public-interest research group. That comes to about $330 per household annually.

"It's getting harder for people to buy things that are repairable. The problem is getting worse, much worse," said Gay Gordon-Byrne, executive director of the Repair Association, a small lobbying group that advocates for independent repair shops.

One example is the use of components that are glued or soldered together.

"Ten years ago you could slide off the back of the phone, and pop out the battery," said Olivia Webb, spokesperson for iFixit, a parts retailer and online community dedicated to repair. "Now, they are adhered with screws, battery pull tabs, some of them are glued in. People don't want you to replace your battery – they want you to buy a new phone."

Christine Datz-Romero, executive director of the Lower East Side Ecology Center in New York, noted that with laptops, both the memory and the hard drive are often incorporated into the motherboard, making it impossible to swap out.

"You're hitting a point where you cannot upgrade your technology anymore. And I think that is another way of forcing people to buy a new machine instead of upgrading an old machine," she said.

Proprietary screws are another example. Disassembling the iPhone 12 requires four different types of screwdrivers, according to Hugh Jeffreys, an advocate of the Right to Repair movement.

Manufacturers are also not shying away from engaging in outright illegal practices that the FTC has called out. For example, many companies still have warranties that are voided if anyone, except the company that made the product, has repaired it.

A few years ago the FTC warned six companies against such void-warranty language. The recipients were eventually revealed to be Asus, HTC, Hyundai, Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony Computer Entertainment.

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Sounds like it's time for the FTC to lower the boom on these and other manufacturers that don't recognize the "right to repair" of their equipment. I would include auto mfg. like Tesla in this as well.
 
Ya'll gonna solder on your own transisters to mobos or something? There is literally nothing on a motherboard that a consumer will ever in a bazillion years be able to fix on their own, so it's not that the 'void if removed' stickers are illegal, it's that they are pointless.

***Also, the warranty should be voided if removed, because it is not the manufacturer's responsibility to fix something that someone else effed up when you tried to get it repaired. Also, if it is still under warranty, why would anyone repair it themselves at their cost when the manufacturer would do it for free, hence the word warranty?
 
Ya'll gonna solder on your own transisters to mobos or something? There is literally nothing on a motherboard that a consumer will ever in a bazillion years be able to fix on their own, so it's not that the 'void if removed' stickers are illegal, it's that they are pointless.

***Also, the warranty should be voided if removed, because it is not the manufacturer's responsibility to fix something that someone else effed up when you tried to get it repaired. Also, if it is still under warranty, why would anyone repair it themselves at their cost when the manufacturer would do it for free, hence the word warranty?
Pardon sir, I have 30 years of IT engineering experience. If it's exposed on the PCB, it can be repaired.
 
Ya'll gonna solder on your own transisters to mobos or something? There is literally nothing on a motherboard that a consumer will ever in a bazillion years be able to fix on their own, so it's not that the 'void if removed' stickers are illegal, it's that they are pointless.

***Also, the warranty should be voided if removed, because it is not the manufacturer's responsibility to fix something that someone else effed up when you tried to get it repaired. Also, if it is still under warranty, why would anyone repair it themselves at their cost when the manufacturer would do it for free, hence the word warranty?
Just because you can't handle a screwdriver doesn't mean most us can't.
 
Ya'll gonna solder on your own transisters to mobos or something? There is literally nothing on a motherboard that a consumer will ever in a bazillion years be able to fix on their own, so it's not that the 'void if removed' stickers are illegal, it's that they are pointless.

***Also, the warranty should be voided if removed, because it is not the manufacturer's responsibility to fix something that someone else effed up when you tried to get it repaired. Also, if it is still under warranty, why would anyone repair it themselves at their cost when the manufacturer would do it for free, hence the word warranty?

Perhaps because it was easier to pay for a replacement fan on a GPU and not deal with the downtime of shipping it off? Many reasons why someone would prefer to just pay the cost to complete some minor repair than to deal with the headache of dealing with customer support.
 
Just because you can't handle a screwdriver doesn't mean most us can't.
Putting a motherboard in isn't repairing a motherboard, it's replacing it, which why would you do yourself if your warranty covers it? That'd be idi0tic. Sure, after the warranty is expired, by all means replace at your hearts content.
 
Combine the whole 'replace the device' push with the general lack of easy access to device recycling services, and companies are just pushing us into more and more landfill waste. It's disgusting.
I have replaced capacitors on motherboards because they were swelling. Swapped sticks of RAM out, because I need more or a stick went bad. Soldered in RAM might be faster in some cases, but at the expense of repairability it's just not a good option.
 
Combine the whole 'replace the device' push with the general lack of easy access to device recycling services, and companies are just pushing us into more and more landfill waste. It's disgusting.
I have replaced capacitors on motherboards because they were swelling. Swapped sticks of RAM out, because I need more or a stick went bad. Soldered in RAM might be faster in some cases, but at the expense of repairability it's just not a good option.
CAMM is a good balance of the two now.
 
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