@tst123@lemmy.world to Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.worldEnglish • 2 years agoComing from nestle of all peoplelemmy.worldimagemessage-square165fedilinkarrow-up11.4Karrow-down119
arrow-up11.38Karrow-down1imageComing from nestle of all peoplelemmy.world@tst123@lemmy.world to Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.worldEnglish • 2 years agomessage-square165fedilink
minus-square@persolb@lemmy.mllinkfedilinkEnglish158•2 years agoSending the JavaScript to do this literally uses more electricity than this saves.
minus-square@bionicjoey@lemmy.calinkfedilinkEnglish63•2 years agoThis is classic. Corpos that are the biggest polluters are also the ones that push hardest on the idea of “carbon footprint” The more they can convince people that climate change is their fault, the less likely people vote for a government that will regulate the corpos
minus-squarehombre fundidolinkfedilinkEnglish4•2 years agoThroughline (podcast) did an episode on corporations off-loading responsibility for stuff like this onto the populace. Found it: episode is called “The Litter Myth.”
minus-squarediprount_tomatolinkfedilinkEnglish-1•2 years agoDon’t worry, they’ll vote for a government that regulates the people and not the corpos
minus-squareelgordiolinkfedilink27•2 years agoPlus all the energy used in developing the feature in the first place. What a crock.
Sending the JavaScript to do this literally uses more electricity than this saves.
This is classic. Corpos that are the biggest polluters are also the ones that push hardest on the idea of “carbon footprint”
The more they can convince people that climate change is their fault, the less likely people vote for a government that will regulate the corpos
Throughline (podcast) did an episode on corporations off-loading responsibility for stuff like this onto the populace.
Found it: episode is called “The Litter Myth.”
Don’t worry, they’ll vote for a government that regulates the people and not the corpos
Plus all the energy used in developing the feature in the first place. What a crock.