Apple has a way to force you to have your broken iPhone screen fixed by them instead of a third party. Let’s say that your iPhone landed face down in a gravel pit and the screen has been severely shattered. If you have AppleCare+, it will cost only $29 to replace. But if you don’t have coverage and Apple denies your warranty claim (cracked screens are generally not covered), it can cost you as much as $329 to replace the display on the iPhone 11 Pro Max, iPhone 12 Pro Max, or iPhone 13 Pro Max.
If he is not covered by insurance or a warranty, the consumer’s first thought will be to save money by doing the repair himself, or by going to one of the many third-party phone repair stores that have popped up in small and medium-sized cities. But taking your iPhone to a third-party repair shop can cost you access to Face ID. Phone Repair Guru (via 9to5Mac) posted a video on YouTube yesterday and it revealed something interesting.
If you were to have a third-party repair ship repair or replace some parts on an iPhone 13 model such as the proximity sensor, the microphone, or the ambient light sensor, everything will work as expected. Try that with the handset’s display and you’ll get a less than welcome response as the phone will no longer be able to use Face ID. The screen will also say “Important Display Message. Unable to verify this iPhone has a genuine Apple display.”
Using Face ID as leverage, Apple makes sure that any screen repair is routed through Apple’s own repair center or an authorized Apple repair center. All of this comes just comes a couple of months after the FTC voted to give consumers certain rights when it comes to repairing products.
As the FTC said back in July, “While unlawful repair restrictions have generally not been an enforcement priority for the Commission for a number of years, the Commission has determined that it will devote more enforcement resources to combat these practices…the Commission (in 2019) uncovered evidence that manufacturers and sellers may, without reasonable justification, be restricting competition for repair services in numerous ways, including: imposing physical restrictions (e.g., the use of adhesives); limiting the availability of parts, manuals, diagnostic software, and tools to manufacturers’ authorized repair networks.”
Phone Repair Guru mentioned that there is a workaround that will allow a third-party repair shop to replace a damaged screen without Apple knowing about it. However, it requires a complex procedure involving the transferring of some chips from the old screen to the new screen, a process that is considered “sophisticated.”