• fulano@lemmy.eco.br
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    1 year ago

    To what extent are we victims, and to what extent are we part of the system? This isn’t a simple thing to answer, and there’s not a single answer.

    Corporations have too much power, but people fell into consumerism and fanboyism, defending their practices.

    People talk about reducing electronic trash, but will buy the next shiny device at launch, before the last one stops working, will say that it’s a “needed improvement” when someone criticizes things like phones removing audio jacks, and look at people using older stuff as if they’re crazy. People talk about damaging production chains, but won’t prioritize local small ones. There are so many examples, but this is enough to get the idea.

    Somehow, people love brands and corporations.

    • Colt420@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Plenty of good used cars sitting around but some people just can’t live with a car a few years old. Meanwhile I pride myself on driving things that would likely be in the junkyard if I wasnt

    • Thetimefarm@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Corporations absolutely control the power what are you even talking about? The only time they listen to us is when it benefits them directly. Look at Reddit and Twitter right now, you would think the large user backlash would improve things but it doesn’t. We don’t live in a market controlled by you and I, the market it controlled by VC funding and what looks good on an earnings sheet.

      People hated the headphone jack getting removed but that didn’t change anything. I very much did try to keep buying phones with headphone jacks and expandable storage but companies stopped offering them. Sure there are options available but they all have bigger issues for my use case than lacking I/O.

      The EU is requiring user replaceable batteries in phones by 2027, lets take a guess as to who apposes it… is it A) the consumers or B) the phone companies? I’ll give you a minute.

      And oh boy would you look at that, it’s the manufacturers who are fighting against it. So if the manufacturers are fighting regulators over this, do you think the free will of the market could achieve it more efficiently?