Not environmentalist, I think it’s referring to the typical shift of the blame on the consumer.
Comment on Anon cares about the environment
IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works 11 hours ago
I don’t think I’ve ever come across a situation where the environmentalist and the phone seller were the same person.
missphant@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 hours ago
TheFrirish@tarte.nuage-libre.fr 10 hours ago
Fairphone?
edinbruh@feddit.it 3 hours ago
The tech producer in general, never cares about the environment, unless it’s for cost cutting, then they engage in virtue signalling to mask the cost cutting (i.e. not including chargers with a phone).
Yet, when the conversation about e-waste comes up, the producer shifts the blame on the buyer for buying too many devices, instead of the producer designing them to become e-waste. If devices where built to be repairable/repurposable, or at least recycled, it would greatly affect e-waste, but they would risk lower earnings.
In the few instances where a brand delivers a product that is both prestigious and (relatively) too good/lasting to effectively obsolete it at will, then they offer a turn-in service where you send back the old device and get a discount for the new one. This both busts fidelisation and raises prices on the used market, encouraging buying the new device. (I.e. iPhones, vorwerk vacuums).
Always mind the pattern. You will be less manipulatable.