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Unfortunately, it's hard to imagine more sites following USA Today's

Posted: Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:26 am
by Bappy10
In its version for the European Union and in order to properly comply with the GDPR, the newspaper USA Today chose, for example, to eliminate all advertising on its website , which immediately went from weighing 5 megabytes to a weight of just 500 kilobytes.
lead , since advertising pays the bills (at least for the most part) on the Internet.

In order to reduce the (absolutely colossal) carbon footprint left behind by Internet users on the Internet, it is lithuania number data also important for them to be aware of this carbon footprint. Perhaps the large Internet companies should warn users when they reach certain limits of CO2 emissions each day.

Carbonalyser , a browser extension, allows us, without going any further, to visualize in real time how the (extraordinarily intensive) use we make of the Internet is depleting the environment.

It is clear that the seemingly harmless gesture of scrolling through TikTok or Instagram is extremely harmful to the environment. However, almost no one is aware of the perfidy hidden behind this gesture . The day we become truly aware of what surfing the internet means, perhaps (just perhaps) we will be as guilty as we are today about using single-use plastic bags. But are we really willing to change the way we consume the internet to provide some relief to the suffocating planet Earth?