Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
The Toxic Effects of Electronic Waste in Accra, Ghana (2019) (bloomberg.com)
27 points by bonefishgrill on March 19, 2024 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments


It’s funny that this news is getting traction but the fact that for the past 5 days, the entire country (and 4 others in the region) was without reliable internet due to 4 undersea cables simultaneously being cut didn’t receive any attention.


The perpetual chase for quarterly growth means companies churn out products for consumers in developed economies who discard their older toys for the new shiny ones. So much waste is generated and a lot of it is shipped to poorer nations, in some cases via govt applied pressure (like in second hand clothing). It's now up to these poorer nations to figure out how to deal with the waste.

Developed nations should step up right to repair campaigns and punish planned obsolescence by manufacturers to push back against this churn generated by the chase for endless quarterly growth.

I've never seen planned obsolescence feature in discussions about excess carbon dioxide emissions


just think about all the keyboards that will get thrown away because people upgraded to one that has a copilot key.


i coincidentally just watched something about this last night, https://youtu.be/LGBqUM29vic?si=6h_-JwbhbVdKqejA

very interesting, pretty sad


It's slave labor (or close to slave labor) during production (Cobalt Red, Dying for an iPhone are some good overview books on the matter, though you can dive in further if you care), it's working against the "owner" of the device (who often doesn't actually have much in the way of access) during life, collecting behavioral surplus to sell to people who'd like to influence the owner (Zuboff's book on Surveillance Capitalism is a good read here, though the recent Means of Control book looking at the data flows from adtech into government is a useful one too), and it's burned in a third world country at end of life.

Maybe digital consumer tech was a bad idea. At least the way we've gone about it.


There's only slave labor because the political situation has prevented the investment in mechanization that every other mine has gotten.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: