The World’s E-Waste Has Reached a Crisis Point

schizoidman@lemmy.ml to Technology@lemmy.ml – 315 points –
The World’s E-Waste Has Reached a Crisis Point
wired.com
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The most fucked up part is that, if I could, I'd happily take in some of that trash to repair and recirculate it, but corporations make that as difficult as possible so as to not hurt their profits.

And I'd happily keep my current phone if it had security updates, but those ended a few months ago so I'll be throwing out a perfectly good device.

I'm getting a Pixel for my next phone so I can get 7 years of updates, so I'm trying, but it just sucks that perfectly good hardware gets thrown out just because the manufacturer either blocks repairs or stops supporting it...

Shout-out to framework laptops for repairable, upgradeable, and reusable components.

Anecdotal but in my career in corporate this has been the order of operations

  1. Employees get any old equipment free if asked
  2. Employees can pay for any old equipment if asked at a reduced cost
  3. Employees can't get any old equipment

The reason was they company wasn't getting any benefit to give away the equipment. Then it was too much of a hassle to write paperwork for the sales which are then used to write down refreshes. Then they just blanket sold to another company which as an employee you then have to engage but with no discounts.

These big businesses make money hands over feet but god forbid they let Joe Employee keep his old laptop for his kid as an unofficial perk of working there.

Parts are expensive and profit margins are thin. What's stopping us from buying parts on eBay and reselling those phones for profit? You pretty much end up with the cost of the phone to repair the phone.