Electronics might be cheaper than ever before, but they're also harder to fix.

Manufacturers often restrict repair information to so-called "authorised repair centres", leaving owners with little option to pay top-dollar or buy a replacement.

But now a community of like-minded activists is fighting back, trying to ensure that consumers have a "right to repair". We're the ones who own the goods, after all.

"If you can't fix it, you don't really own it," Kyle Wiens, the co-founder and CEO of wiki-based repair community iFixit, told RN Breakfast.

"We're frustrated that all these things that we supposedly own, we don't actually control.

"Manufacturers say: 'Well, if you have any problems, you have to just go and buy another one.'

"Well, I like the thing that I have."

Proprietary parts and tools

According to Mr Wiens, consumers have been disadvantaged by manufacturers' use of proprietary parts, which make them unfixable with normal tools.

"On the bottom of the iPhone, there are two proprietary screws that Apple won't sell you the screwdrivers for," said Mr Wiens by way of example.

"They don't want you to know how to get inside.

"It really comes down to them wanting to sell us a new gizmo every year or two.

"We saw this with the iPods: every year Apple would come with a new iPod, and they were just different colours. But if you put a new battery in an original iPod that's 10 years old it would still work."

The problem of e-waste

According to right to repair advocates, our throw-away culture not only limits consumers' rights, but harms the environment.

"Electronics in particular are not very recyclable, so even if you take your electronics to recycler that can process electronics, they're only able to get a few of the elements back," said Mr Wiens.

"There's a lot of precious elements, there's a lot of environmental costs in manufacturing modern electronics. If we know we can't recycle it, then we should give as much use out of these things as we possibly can before their end of life."

The industry, however, is not sympathetic. As companies continue their efforts to make products unrepairable, the right to repair movement tries to find new loopholes and ways to mend electronics.

"They've been trying to glue things together," said Mr Wiens. "On some tablets, we're seeing the batteries glued in. Then we worked and we developed techniques to unglue the batteries so that you can swap them up.

"I don't think Apple likes me very much."

Many in the movement getting government on side as their best hope. In Sweden, for example, consumers are given tax breaks for having their electronics repaired in order to reduce waste.

"I think that makes a lot of sense," said Mr Wiens.

"If you think about what we want ... we want to encourage more labour, we want to create more jobs, and we want to disincentivise this as much as possible on the manufacturing side so that we can make these things last longer."