this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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Cars are absolutely user-serviceable. I do pretty much all of my own maintenance, and I'm not all that mechanically inclined, I just watch YouTube videos and follow along. All you need is a set of wrenches and screwdrivers and you can do most regular repairs.
It's a lot easier imo to do most car repairs than replace a phone screen imo. With a screen repair, you need finesse with a heat gun and be careful with ribbon cables.
The problem with modern cars and phones though isn't the Inherent complexity, but the artificial complexity from vendors locking things down. As in, they pair components cryptographically and it's illegal to distribute tools for profit that break that encryption. If they provided the tools to pair components, it wouldn't be an issue, but they hide behind IP and DMCA protections, which essentially locks you into their service.
That's kind of what the article was getting at imo. Vendors are finding new ways to lock you in instead of retaining you with a better product. So companies are trying to get the benefits of being a monopoly through technical and legal means.