this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2025
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I know EU has the Right to Repair initiative and that's a step to the right direction. Still I'm left to wonder, how did we end up in a situation where it's often cheaper to just buy a new item than fix the old?

What can individuals, communities, countries and organizations do to encourage people to repair rather than replace with a new?

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[–] bluesheep@sh.itjust.works 5 points 1 day ago

every repair can be made by a layman with good documentation available, spare parts are quickly available and cheap.

That's part of the problem isn't it tho? When products aren't designed to be serviceable, let alone to be serviceable by someone not specialized, and spare parts aren't easily available (not even at 3rd parties), your only option quickly becomes to just buy a new one.

A few years back I replaced the screen on my Xiaomi Mi5. Parts were okayish to order, and while I did succeed, I wouldn't have called it doable by someone who's not afraid to turn their phone into a glorified paperweight. And that's only gotten worse since then.