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It does sound like this means it's now easier to get a touch screen, embed a tap logger in it, and then swap someone else's screen with it. (Similarly, for the camera module, etc, etc.) A better approach would be to force Apple to allow the device owner to pair parts (third party or not), and for Apple to provide a list of authorized non-OEM parts to anyone that was considering buying a used phone. Also, I wonder what this does to the anti-theft mechanisms. Before touch id, basically nobody set screen passwords, and phones were stolen at extremely high rates. After that, and because a stolen iPhone is marked as such and won't work with Apple services, phone theft dropped to almost zero. If Apple's not allowed to prevent the pairing of the stolen parts in Oregon, I'm guessing it will lead to a black market industry there, where people launder stolen phone parts into refurbished phones by mixing them with parts from broken phones. |
https://www.ifixit.com/News/91648/banning-parts-pairing-wont...
If Apple disagrees with iFixit and has genuine reasons to believe this will compromise security, they can share their reasoning publicly and let people judge. So far I don't think they have.