Fight to Repair Podcast

Fight to Repair

A podcast series profiling experts, business leaders, and everyday people on the front lines of the fight for the right to repair.

  1. 02/01/2023

    EP 12 | Hillbilly hacker on junk hacking and the right to repair with Travis Goodspeed

    Travis Goodspeed has a unique relationship with “stuff.” A renowned “hillbilly hacker” from Tennessee, Travis is a reverse engineer and device hacker without peer. He’s best known as an outspoken advocate of “junk hacking” - the practice of probing low end, low stakes devices like children’s toys and consumer as a way to understand more complex, higher stakes technology - from enterprise systems to critical infrastructure. But taking stuff apart is just one of Travis’s passions. He’s equally famous for the stuff he’s created. His Github projects have spawned hundreds of forks and include the GoodWatch, a modification of a Casio calculator watch that Travis re-engineered to transmit and receive radio signals; Goodfet, an embedded bus adapter for microcontrollers and radios; as well as the Tytera MD-380: a low cost DMR radio that he reverse engineered to run custom firmware. Not surprisingly: Travis is a passionate believer in the right to repair, which he describes as a kind of “natural right” that individuals should exercise, regardless of legal and commercial impediments. But his deep experience exploring the innards of connected devices and years spent navigating around the shoals of copyright and computer hacking laws have given Travis a nuanced take on our ability to exercise that natural right to repair. In this conversation, Travis talks to Paul about growing up in east Tennessee, in and around Dollywood, where his mother worked as a stained glass master craftswoman for two decades. We also talk about his unique take on the right to repair, and the growing legions of stuff that populates our world - one informed by a deep understanding of the common hardware and software hiding beneath the sleek exteriors of connected devices.

    19 min
  2. 08/31/2022

    EP 6 | How Amazon Invaded Our Lives with Emily West

    Dr. Emily West gets us inside the mind of Amazon to better understand how corporations are working to turn us into passive consumers. At its core, the right to repair is a struggle with corporations over how we interact with products they sell. This week, Dr. Emily West offers Amazon as a case study to help us understand how companies are able to constrain our choices as consumers under the guise of convenience. We see many of the same tactics used to restrict repair like market consolidation and locked software ecosystems play out across industries from consumer electronics to agriculture. Emily and Jack discuss how Amazon’s business practices and branding are helping it eat up market share across every corner of the global economy, which is making it harder for us to escape the company’s influence. Emily is a media theorist from the University of Massachusetts Amherst who writes about promotional culture, platforms, and digital media. She recently published a book titled Buy Now: How Amazon Branded Convenience and Normalized Monopoly. You can read the book here or buy it (we recommend Bookshop). If you want to skip to the interview – it starts at 23:22. To stay up to date on what Emily is working on, check out her website. News Roundup Links:SecuRepairs is at DEF CON!Right to Repair: Where Is It Now?Maine’s right-to-repair initiative would likely face legal challengeReduce, Reuse, Recycle, Repair? Current and Future Right-To-Repair Rules in The European Union and United Kingdom [PDF] Report: Toward and Effective Right to Repair[Book] The Politics of Common Sense: How Social Movements Use Public Discourse to Change Politics and Win Acceptance Tell Us What You ThinkSend us a question or comment at whatthefixpodcast@gmail.com (premium subscribers go to the top of the pile)We’d appreciate a 5-star review on your podcasting platform of choice

    1h 6m

About

A podcast series profiling experts, business leaders, and everyday people on the front lines of the fight for the right to repair.