(As an aside, Per, my friend, consider how much debatably positive stuff you’ve put in the positive shit thread and ask yourself whether you’ve conflated your particular worldview with what is objectively good.)
Here’s why it’s not a positive good:Per wrote: ↑Sat Apr 25, 2026 12:53 am The European Union already forced Apple to abandon its proprietary charging port and adopt USB-C across its entire iPhone lineup. It just did something bigger. A new EU mandate requires every smartphone sold in Europe including Apple devices to feature a battery that can be replaced by the user without specialist tools, without voiding a warranty, and without sending the device to a manufacturer approved service center. Batteries must maintain a minimum capacity threshold after a set number of charge cycles and replacement parts must remain available for up to ten years after a model goes on sale.
The consumer electronics industry built its current business model around batteries that degrade, cannot be replaced at home, and create a natural upgrade cycle every two to three years. The EU just legislated that model out of existence in the world's largest regulatory market. Apple, Samsung, and every other manufacturer now faces a choice between redesigning their devices for the European market or accepting that their current hardware architecture is no longer legally sellable there. Given fthat no company walks away from European consumers voluntarily the phones are going to change and once they change for Europe the rest of the world will ask why theirs still do not.
(1) the harm it is trying to address (forced obsolescence) is achievable through many means other than batteries. It won’t solve any problem, it will simply force it in a new direction (and frankly, Apple moved to OS upgrades and older phones not being able to take newest OS and newer apps not having compatibility with old a long time ago).
(2) Forced obsolescence can be a good thing, or at least involves good and bad tradeoffs. I hated that Apple got rid of the 3.5 mm jack for headphones, but the forced use of Bluetooth has helped improve Bluetooth and Bluetooth related technologies. The thing that bothered me the most about using the lightning/usb-c to connect with headphones was that you couldn’t simultaneously charge — then cam charging docks.
(3) Detachable battery phones exist in spades. If a consumer demands it, it’s there. But many choose the phone package where you can’t replace. Two bigger points here — what’s the evidence the market is broken and why is less consumer choice the solution to a broken market?
(4) Detachable batteries may or may not be as efficient as built ins. I don’t know about this, but I know that Apple has traditionally been a step ahead on battery charge, it’s one of the main areas of competition. And it’s why twice I’ve switch back to Apple products (after using detachable battery android based phones). Do I ever have to charge my phone when I am not sleeping with normal usage?
(5) The forced use of usb-c is presented as an unqualified good? Was it really? The lightning connector was a huge upgrade over the many pin system they had previously, though I didn’t like that change at the time. But do they charge equally fast? Are their connections better or worse? I am not sure of the answer, but the point is that there is no reason to believe performance of identically purposed goods are identical. You want to encourage companies to find an edge. Maybe the best way to think about this point is not usb-c v. Lightning, but usb-c v. the next technology that isn’t on the market and now there is less incentive to develop because now it would require an eu rule change to bring to market. Regulation stifles innovation. And best case for evolution requires more for lobbyists than engineers. (But we hate crony capitalism, right?)
(6) To that end, Do you want Ursula von der Leyen in charge of phone design, or companies who do phone design?
(7) not only are their competitor systems with detachable batteries in the market (this eu regulation picks winners….), but their are insurance products/warranties one can buy to hedge against obsolescence if they want.
At the end of the day, there is good and there is bad with component systems vs. completely integrated systems, and we see product markets all over the world that opt for one or the other while competing in the same space. Consumer preference is diverse on this score. Let the buyer decide is my view.

