One way regulators can go about ensuring this is to tag an additional "e-wastage" tax inversely tied to the "repairability index" ( https://repair.eu/news/the-french-repair-index-challenges-an... ) of a device . The less repairable a device is, the higher the "e-wastage" tax should be. This should appeal to some who think the consumer should be allowed to spend their money as they want. If some really want to splurge on a device that is hard to repair, let them also bear the burden for the environmental impact the waste creates.
> It had been destroyed. Because we had not initially removed the two security screws, the screen had been held in place while I was trying to pry it open, which had caused damage.
Not saying Apple's kit or program is ideal, but the disaster was 100% user error. He did it correctly with a test iPhone, but then when he went to fix his real iPhone he skipped Step 1 and ended up breaking the screen.