## Email The convenience¹ of email inspires a huge bias in favor of email (and
likely confirmation bias to a large extent). But if you can detach from the
tyranny of convenience [https://alexandrite.slrpnk.net/slrpnk.net/post/14980075]
and look at email critically, it does not look like such an obvious best choice
ecologically. Consider these inconvenient facts: * Apple, Amazon, Google &
Microsoft have teamed up
[https://wccftech.com/apple-google-microsoft-team-up-to-stop-right-to-repair-law/]
to block Right-To-Repair laws
[https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-05-20/microsoft-and-apple-wage-war-on-gadget-right-to-repair-laws].
* Google’s Android phones (and other smart devices) are only updated for a few
yrs
[https://privacyinternational.org/report/4965/we-looked-software-support-practices-5-most-popular-smart-devices-and-results-may]
* Google caught excluding climate effects except CO₂ from Google Flights search
results [https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-62664981] * Google
accepted money from Bayer Monsanto to bury unfavorable news
[https://futurism.com/the-byte/monsanto-google-hide-unfavorable-news] (and
Bayer-Monsanto is environmentally harmful) * Google sells machine learning to
fossil fuel corporations [https://www.alphabetworkers.org/resignation-letter/]
(see also YT videov3n8txX3144) * Google finances climate deniers
[https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/oct/11/google-contributions-climate-change-deniers]
* War is bad for the environment and Google supports Russia’s war (but says they
are scaling back
[https://som.yale.edu/story/2022/over-1000-companies-have-curtailed-operations-russia-some-remain]
Google’s support for fossil fuels is probably the most notable problem.
Microsoft is even worse than Google (see item 11
[https://git.sdf.org/humanacollaborator/humanacollabora/src/branch/master/github.md]).
Even if you are the rare netizen who uses an ethical email provider, probably
over 95% of your email traffic is with a gmail or outlook user. Nearly all
corporations and gov agencies are using Microsoft for email service but it’s
masked by their vanity addresses. Of course PGP is not an option for ~95+% of
your email traffic, so MS and Google profit from your traffic in both directions
because it all feeds their advertising networks. From there, the ads fuel
consumerism, leading to more purchases of shit that takes a toll on the
environment. So how good is email for the environment when you take all factors
into account? I restricted the dirt above to ecocide as this is a climate forum,
but once you also account for non-environmental factors like privacy abuses, MS
and Google are a clear non-starter. ¹ I use “convenience” more loosely than
justified because email is very inconvenient for some of us, like people who run
their own mail servers in order to not needlessly feed extra 3rd parties. The
anti-spammers have really ruined the convenience and availability of email by
going to extremes that impose colatteral damage on legit email. So it’s not
really fair to call email convenient any longer. ## Fax A fax can be sent
without printing. Your letter just needs to be formatted for US letter or A4 and
in a raster graphic. More often than not, the receiving side is a service that
attaches the letter to an email and sends it to the recipient, who likely uses
Microsoft. The pros: * You can withhold your email address from the letter, thus
preventing an email reply (which would then feed the MS ad network and lead to
more purchases). * MS must work harder to snoop and OCR the raster image. But do
they? Idk. If they do, it would expend more energy. But if they don’t, the msg
avoids feeding the ad network. The cons: * The electronic payload is more bulky,
thus uses more energy per msg. ## Paper letters Paper must be used, but the
paper industry has trended toward sustainabilty and some regions have a mandate
on recycling paper (yes, it is illegal to toss recyclable paper in with other
waste in wise parts of the world). Unprinting
[https://www.rutgers.edu/news/new-unprinting-method-can-help-recycle-paper-and-curb-environmental-costs]
has made progress, which would enable you to erase toner from a page to reuse
it. When a recipient in my city uses Google or Microsoft for email and they have
no fax number, I print my correspondence on paper and cycle to their mailbox.
It’s a way of saying fuck you to the giant surveillance advertisers. And because
all kinds of tech rights and ethics are being pissed on by Google and MS in
addition to their environmental abuses, this approach is the clear winner for
me. It’s not exactly obvious which choice is the least harmful for the
environment without research that really dissects it and looks at the nuts and
bolts of it. But I conjecture that if enough people were to switch back to fax
and paper letters and cause inconvenience for Microsoft & Google recipients, it
would drive them to choose more ethical email providers in order to esacape the
burden of scanning paper and then the cost of paying the postal service to carry
their reply. This ultimately favors a more sustainable path even if it’s taking
a step backwards in order to take more steps forwards.
^^^ ignore that shitty preview above and visit the link! ^^^
Microsoft and Google are terrible for the environment (per the linked post). Yet every time you email someone on those platforms you support an ecocidal baddy.
So a climate action, as ironic as it sounds, is to send more faxes and paper letters. It rightfully annoys office workers, many of whome think you are working against the environment – until they read your informative explanation of the harms of MS or Google at the end of your letter.
Of course, you have to weigh whether it makes sense to state why you’re sending paper. If they have discretion in processing whatever you’re sending, it doesn’t always make sense to risk having the letter ignored. But if the recipient has an obligation to treat your letter, it’s a good idea to take the opportunity to bash their choice of email providers on the off chance that they tip off the IT guy that the email provider is objectionable.