Last March Oregon became the seventh state to pass “right to repair” legislation making it easier, cheaper, and more convenient to repair technology you own. The bill’s passage …
Last March Oregon became the seventh state to pass “right to repair” legislation making it easier, cheaper, and more convenient to repair technology you own. The bill’s passage came on the heels of legislation passed in Massachusetts (in 2012 and 2020), Colorado (in 2022 and 2023), New York (2023), Minnesota, Maine and California. All told, 30 states are considering such bills in 2024.
If you go through your state's Attorney General's office and you provide all the documentation of what you've requested, what has been denied, what the law is, and what you want as the outcome, it typically just takes a letter being sent from the AG to get what you want (assuming it is reasonable). If the law says that documentation or parts need to be made available, and that is what you ask to be done to close the matter, then a letter from the Attorney General will likely get that for you. States aren't going to force this matter until their citizens start providing evidence and asking for enforcement.
They’ve been doing it for decades now because those “void if removed” stickers were always a blatant violation of existing laws in the US yet still continue to this day.