Connecticut / smartphone/Fairphone
Fairphone smartphone owners in Connecticut.
4 statutory rights, plus Fairphone's own self-service repair channels and known controversies.
Figure 01 — Fairphone repair channels
Self-service availableFairphone repair channels
Self-service portal
shop.fairphone.comFairphone is widely regarded as the gold standard for repairability. All spare parts are sold direct-to-consumer at transparent prices, and modules can be swapped by users with a standard Phillips screwdriver - no proprietary tools or pairing required. Fairphone 5 (2023) ships with 8 years of OS/security updates and 8+ years of spare parts availability. Step-by-step repair guides are co-published with iFixit.
Authorized providers
support.fairphone.comSample spare parts
- Fairphone 5 display modulesee source
- Fairphone 5 batterysee source
- Fairphone 5 USB-C port modulesee source
- Fairphone 5 rear camera modulesee source
- Fairphone 5 back coversee source
Known repair issues
- Limited geographic availability. Fairphone devices are sold primarily in Europe, which limits the impact of its repairability advantages on consumers in North America, Asia, and other regions.
Figure 02 — Statutory rights in Connecticut
Statutory rights in Connecticut
- 01
Right to parts, tools and documentation
Manufacturers of electronic or appliance products must make available to owners and independent repair providers any documentation, functional parts, and tools that they make available to their authorized repair providers, on fair and reasonable terms.
Connecticut Public Act 25-44 (Substitute Senate Bill No. 3), An Act Concerning Consumer Protection and Safety - 02
Disclosure by non-authorized repair providers
A service dealer or repair facility that is not an authorized repair provider for a manufacturer must affirmatively disclose that status to the consumer before performing repairs.
Connecticut Public Act 25-44 (Substitute Senate Bill No. 3) - 03
Fair and reasonable terms standard
Parts, tools, and documentation must be supplied on fair and reasonable terms — meaning, in general, on terms no more onerous than those a manufacturer offers its own authorized repair network.
Connecticut Public Act 25-44 (Substitute Senate Bill No. 3) - 04
No requirement to disclose trade secrets
The right-to-repair provisions do not require a manufacturer to divulge trade secrets or to enable bypass of security features, but the duty to supply ordinary repair documentation, parts, and tools still applies.
Connecticut Public Act 25-44 (Substitute Senate Bill No. 3)