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HP Wants Manufacturers To Bear PC Disposal Costs

Makarand writes "The Mercury News is reporting that HP, which had earlier persuaded the Governor to veto an innovative e-waste measure, has changed its mind and is throwing its weight behind California's e-waste bill which would require PC manufacturers to bear the cost of PC disposal. This reversal by HP is close upon the heels of a a series of articles, carried by the Mercury News, detailing how the industry relied on cheap overseas labor to make a profits and at the same time distanced itself from the responsibilities of dead PC disposal."

311 comments

  1. AOL, GM and FORD by jazz_hunter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Shouldn't the CD-R manufacturers bear some cost as well? And what about my worn out tires...

    --
    WANTED: Good sig, funny, concise yet somewhat esoteric.
    1. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by swordboy · · Score: 2, Informative

      And what about my worn out tires...

      If you get your tires changed at any reasonably large tire vendor, then you are paying for tire disposal. Look at your receipt. This happened to me on Monday at Wal Mart. They would not allow me to dispose of the tires on my own, nor did they want to remove the charge, which they had not disclosed. I told them to put my old tires back on the car and refund my money.

      They gladly refunded the money at that point (actually, I hadn't even paid yet). PC disposal needs to be taken care of up front - since disposal is already paid for, there is no need to "dump it" somewhere. Just take it into an authorized disposal center and drop it off for free. Tires should be this way too...

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    2. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

      In Florida it is (or used to be) $1/tire. I think $4 wouldn't be enough money for me to flip out about it.

      --


      I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
    3. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by McFly69 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What about all those frigin "free" AOL disks being sent to our homes? I suggest AOL to be forced to for recycling (like a 5 cent deposit for cans). The idea is basically an extenstion of what certain people are already doing. Similar ideas been already mention on slashdot and CNN

      Basically my idea is, when people recieve these "junk" AOL disks, they should be able to drop of these disks, at a certified, recycling plant to get a small return (for their recycling effor). Like 5 cents per a disk. The 5 cents would be paid by AOL. This way, the dump sites would have less waste to dispose.

      Something like this would require a federal law to be implimented and enforced. Perhaps the US Post Office (and other mailing places) would take the deposit and return when the cd's are returned.

      Any ideas on this?

      --



      NO! NO! Please don't mod me, I'm too young to die a troll. *click* Oh the pain, the pain...
    4. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by gowen · · Score: 1
      Any ideas on this?
      You could do what this guy did, and gather them up (80,000 and counting) and return them to AOL as a protest.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    5. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He already linked to that guy's web site.

    6. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      the fun part is how this shows how completely stupid any and every politician is.. "we dont want consumers to pay to clean this up! we're gonna make the companies pay for it!" translation:"the companies are going to raise the price of every PC by $200.00 to cover the cost of disposal...oh and added $$$ for administrative fees...

      complete fricking idiots we have running this country... from the townships to the president of the country...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    7. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by rnturn · · Score: 2
      ``What about all those frigin "free" AOL disks being sent to our homes?''

      Heck, AOL could at least make them CD-RW disks! At least in the old days, AOL was nice enough to send me a scratch floppy every couple of weeks that I could use to make copies of files that I schlepped between the office and home.

      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    8. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by McFly69 · · Score: 2

      so true... I still have a stack of them at home. I even used the macintrash disk for files. I loved them. But the recent AOL disks they been sendign are with DVD type cases. So I been using them to store other cd's

      --



      NO! NO! Please don't mod me, I'm too young to die a troll. *click* Oh the pain, the pain...
    9. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by Planesdragon · · Score: 2

      he fun part is how this shows how completely stupid any and every politician is.. "we dont want consumers to pay to clean this up! we're gonna make the companies pay for it!" translation:"the companies are going to raise the price of every PC by $200.00 to cover the cost of disposal...oh and added $$$ for administrative fees...

      If the consumer has to conduct a seperate transaction to properly dispose of thier PC, _it won't get done._

      The government doesn't care if the PC makers pass on their recycling costs or eat the charge as a charitable tax write-off... they want the PCs to recycle, and binding the _purchase_ and _disposal_ transcations is the most sure way to see it get done.

    10. Re:AOL, GM and FORD by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      Bullshit, the costs will be shared by the producer and the consumer. See here, my handy graph. Note that raising the costs artifcially through a tax or fee does not affect demand directly, only supply.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  2. That sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is the point!

    1. Re:That sucks by njdj · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What is the point!

      The point is that the total cost of a PC is the cost of producing, selling, and delivering it, plus the cost of disposing of it when it becomes trash.

      At present in the US (unlike some other countries) only the first 3 of these are paid by the buyer. The last cost, the cost of disposing of it, is paid by the taxpayer, who gets no say in which PC was bought. So market forces will ignore the cost of disposal. A PC which is identical to another, except that it is cheaper to dispose of, will not have an advantage in the marketplace - although for overall economic efficiency, it obviously should have. The solution is to make the buyer pay the total cost instead of just part of it, which is what this measure does (the manufacturer will pass the cost along to the consumer). OK?

    2. Re:That sucks by Iguanaphobic · · Score: 2

      The solution is to make the buyer pay the total cost instead of just part of it, which is what this measure does (the manufacturer will pass the cost along to the consumer). OK?

      Going forward, this is an excellent idea. But what about the existing mess?

      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power.
    3. Re:That sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The last cost, the cost of disposing of it, is paid by the taxpayer,

      Really!? You mean I can stop paying my Waste Management bills now, and the taxpayers will cover it? Hooray, my business just saved a fortune!

      Try working with facts next time, okay?

    4. Re:That sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked, I paid for my trash removal service. Yep, sure enough, here's the bill. Hmm. It seems like the trash company charges me a premium for difficult to dispose of items to cover the surcharge they have to pay to the landfill company.

      I just checked with the landfill. Yeah, they charge me to dump material, too. Hmm, they also have a surcharge for certain items.

    5. Re:That sucks by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      Well, first off - businesses are taxpayers. And many businesses just throw their computers into the standard garbage, thus avoiding any special waste disposal fees and putting the burden on everyone as opposed to specifically paying the cost themselves.

      Every business I've worked at until the current one disposed of junk computer equipment by putting it in garbage bags and then placing it in the dumpster to be taken, I assume, to a landfill. This is against the law, I'm sure (since I know I'm not allowed to throw items like computer monitors away in my home trash), but they do it anyway.

    6. Re:That sucks by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      See my above response. Most business I have worked for just throw computer equipment away with the regular trash, in the same dumpster, in the same bags. If you think someone digs through all the trash to see what needs special disposal, you're crazy.

    7. Re:That sucks by Helter · · Score: 1

      And I suppose that you are under the mistaken impression that the business does not pay to have that dumpster emptied?
      Try not paying your garbage collection bills, see how quickly your old PC stays right where you left it.

      Even if you were correct, why would this only apply to computers? Why not ALL garbage?

    8. Re:That sucks by beakburke · · Score: 1

      The problem is that if you make recycling too expensive for companies, it becomes a serious enforcement problem. It would actually be better for the environment if state and local governments just rolled it into the cost of waste disposal. Ideally the consumer would pay when they throw it away, that makes it their responsibility, as it should be. What this does is pass the buck to the manufacturers, since the govt finds it easier to regulate them. But this means more paperwork and cost for the little guy, which is harder on him, since HP can probably have a unit devoted to just disposal, unlike a mom-and-pop store.
      Im all for internalizing costs, but nonpoint pollution is a real SOB to enforce, thats why the public sector exists, because even though we didnt do the pollution ourself (well not neccessarily) we all benefitted from it, and it hurts all of us, so why shouldnt we share the cost of it (at least the pollution that has already taken place). Besides, you cant retroactively charge for the computers already sold now can you? So who gets saddled with disposing them?

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    9. Re:That sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you think that dumpster is emptied by the taxpayers, you're ignorant.

    10. Re:That sucks by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      And I suppose that you are under the mistaken impression that the business does not pay to have that dumpster emptied?
      Try not paying your garbage collection bills, see how quickly your old PC stays right where you left it.


      First, please note the phrase that I used in my comment "many businesses just throw their computers into the standard garbage, thus avoiding any special waste disposal fees and putting the burden on everyone as opposed to specifically paying the cost themselves".

      In many states (maybe all, I have no idea), you are not allowed to dispose of certain items (tires, car batteries, computer monitors) in the regular trash. If you throw them in your regular trash, you are circumventing the extra fees you are _supposed_ to pay to have those specialty items disposed of.

      For example, I pay a nominal fee to have my garbage hauled off. But if I want to throw away certain items, I have to call a number and arrange for a pick up. They come and pick up the items and that month, I get charged extra for the special item disposal. Of course, many people just put these special items in regular garbage bags and avoid the extra fee.

      The people that do this are thus placing the burden on everyone, since they are avoiding the extra cost that their trash incurs. If nothing else, they are making the cost of running the specialty item pickup service be more expensive for those who follow the rules.

      Even if you were correct, why would this only apply to computers? Why not ALL garbage?

      I never said it shouldn't apply to all garbage. At least, all garbage that can't simply be placed in a landfill.

    11. Re:That sucks by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      If hazardous material is improperly disposed of and ends up in a landfill, then the government goes in and declares that landfill a Superfund site, whose money do you think pays for that?

      Sure, one monitor won't make a landfill hazardous, but if enough people are improperly disposing of hazardous materials, it will add up. Ever looked at the list of Superfund sites? There are a pretty good amount of landfills on there. And again, who pays to clean those sites? You, me and everyone else, that's who.

  3. I'm surprised... by craenor · · Score: 5, Funny

    That HP would support this, seeing as how so many Compaq and HP computers are worthy only of Disposal...

    Craenor

    1. Re:I'm surprised... by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 2
      FWIW, I had an HP for six years and it never screwed up on me. The only thing I had to replace on it was the modem, once I installed Red Hat 5.1. I just bought a new box (hey, it pays to upgrade to get an order of magnatude performance improvement) and donated the old box to my church, where it will probably work as our web server for the next few years.

      Compaqs are pure crap; on this much we can agree. But thus far I've had positive experiences with HPs.

  4. Manufacturers bear the costs? by EatHam · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My initial thought is that yes, they should bear the costs. Computers have all sorts of nastiness inside of them, and *someone's* gotta take care of it. However, where do you draw the line? Styrofoam? Plastics? Bleach? Can't have the lifetime costs built into everything - that would make just about everything price-prohibitive.

    1. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what some people want, though. You know, the same kind of people that take Drano rockets to comets.

    2. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by McCart42 · · Score: 2
      My initial thought is that yes, they should bear the costs. Computers have all sorts of nastiness inside of them, and *someone's* gotta take care of it. However, where do you draw the line? Styrofoam? Plastics? Bleach? Can't have the lifetime costs built into everything - that would make just about everything price-prohibitive.
      Just about everything, except for that which is made environmentally friendly. I'm not supporting or rejecting this bill yet since I haven't read enough about it, but if it did go through, I predict manufacturers might be more willing to shoulder the burden of making their products better for the environment so as to save on costs of disposal (which raise the cost of the item to prohibitive levels, as you've said).
      --
      "I may be quite wrong." - Socrates
    3. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by ewhac · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Can't have the lifetime costs built into everything - that would make just about everything price-prohibitive.

      Which is more price-prohibitive?

      • Paying the disposal/recycling costs on your consumables up-front; or
      • Paying them after the municipal dump heap has already poisoned your ground water?

      Schwab

    4. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by karlandtanya · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Our way of life--self-centered consumption with no thought for the implications thereof--is not sustainable. That is to say, our current lifestyle fails the test of self-consistency.

      This lifestyle will end. It will end in either an uncontrolled catastrophic manner, or in a quiet disciplined manner. But it will end.

      Clearly you are already aware of this. You state that the lifetime costs of "just about everything" are prohibitive. In this statement, I agree with you.

      Therefore, prohibition of "nearly everything" is merely an acknowledgement of facts of which we are already aware. Those things whose lifetime costs are price-prohibitive would appropriately be prohibited. Immediate cash price will simply reflect true cost.

      "If we dig precious things from the land, we will invite disaster.
      Near the Day of Purification, there will be cobwebs spun back and forth it the sky.
      A container of ashes might one day be thrown from the sky, which could burn the land and boil the oceans."


      Translation of the Hopi Prophecies sung in the film "Koyaanisqatsi".

      --
      "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    5. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Golias · · Score: 1
      Which is more price-prohibitive?

      * Paying the disposal/recycling costs on your consumables up-front; or
      * Paying them after the municipal dump heap has already poisoned your ground water?

      The first one.

      Many places don't have ground water to drill for at all. Where I live, it's there but not fit for human consumption anyway, due to all the nitrates in the soil (although it's excellent for watering your lawn!). We filter and sanitize all of our water from the river.

      Here's a thought: disallow putting old computers in municipal dump heaps, classifying them as hazardous waste that must be handled separately. Oh wait, most states and communities are already doing that. What was the problem again? Oh, none? Okay then.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    6. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by patter · · Score: 1


      Can't have the lifetime costs built into everything - that would make just about everything price-prohibitive.

      Which is more price-prohibitive?

      Paying the disposal/recycling costs on your consumables up-front; or
      Paying them after the municipal dump heap has already poisoned your ground water?


      Good ideas, agree with that principal. But can someone please explain when a PC became a consumable?? Best not tell the IRS or other taxman, because you can't depreciate consumables. ;)

      Bloated crappy software is partly to blame for this bogus trend to think that if you don't get a new PC every year you're poor.

      But still, bearing that in mind, I'm sure we all know one person who's kinda 'have not' that may be interested in a computer. Don't throw the damn thing away give it to a starving comp. sci. student near you.

      --
      -- If at first you do succeed, try to hide your astonishment. -- Harry F. Banks
    7. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Economics education sucks in this country. Non-environmentally friendly would be impossible to afford, environmentally friendly would be barely possible to afford, and, of course, junk science-based watermelon environmentalists (green on the outside, red on the inside) would be telling us all what we can eat, drink, drive and wear.

      Somebody should tell Marx he just packaged it wrong.

      Four legs good, two legs bad....Or was it organically grown good, biotech bad. I forget.

    8. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And, of course, Americans by the millions are dying from poisoned groundwater from all the horrible toxins we are throwing in our landfills. Yep, the roadways are just choked with them. Nightly news alerts showing overflowing emergency rooms with people gripped in psychotic dementia brought on by heavy metal poisoning are everywhere.

      Come into my cave, Chicken Little, where it will be safe

      -Foxy Loxy.

    9. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, just tack it onto your health costs. Then only the people who get sick from the toxic waste or injured by a protruding piece of junk while walking in their new subdivision (Landfill Estates) will have to pay. No, that wouldn't work, the insurance companies would just raise the rates for everybody. How about increased garbage/sanitation fees for trash pickup. No, everybody pays there too. Wait, I have it, we just stop using computers. Gee, that would affect a lot of people as well. Gosh, I can't think of a solution that wouldn't affect everybody. I guess that's just the way the our earth-ecosystem works. Maybe more thought should be given to what waste will be generated and what to do about it before it's put into production and into the waste stream

    10. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by sk8king · · Score: 1

      I have MOD points but if I mod you up, I can't reply and I just want to say that the comment:

      "Therefore, prohibition of "nearly everything" is merely an acknowledgement of facts of which we are already aware. Those things whose lifetime costs are price-prohibitive would appropriately be prohibited. Immediate cash price will simply reflect true cost."

      is one of the most intelligent statements I have seen on Slashdot. I want to put it on a shirt or something.

      Now, go to another article, post something stupid and I'll mod you up for it.

    11. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      Here's a thought: disallow putting old computers in municipal dump heaps, classifying them as hazardous waste that must be handled separately. Oh wait, most states and communities are already doing that. What was the problem again? Oh, none? Okay then.

      The problem is that people don't do this. They just throw them away with the normal trash. If you got $5 or $10 for turning it in to a recycling center though, you'd be way more likely to dispose of it properly.

    12. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      Well, no, Americans aren't. But people are suffering the exact symptoms you describe due to discarded computers.

    13. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Icculus · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Can't have the lifetime costs built into everything - that would make just about everything price-prohibitive.

      It might at first, but it would also give manufacturers an incentive to create more friendly or reusable products and materials. This would allow them to charge less and gain market share. Check out Cradle to Cradle (which was reviewed on /. a few months back). It talks about this topic in depth.

      As another poster noted, you pay for it one way or another whether in up-front monetary cost or in destroyed environment and depleted natural resources.
    14. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait a moment! Marx was in favour of of
      science and technology - what he was against
      was the holding back of it, and human creativity
      and potential generally, under capitalism.

    15. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Only if you add the cost of recycling to the price in the first place will consumers have a fair way of comparing the environmental cost of products. Voting with their wallets, they will quickly convince manufacturers to go eco-friendly

    16. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How ignorant. The problem is "paying for disposal up front". It's proper disposal in the first place, which the US doesn't have, not only for computers, but even for basic things like batteries and tires, that's the problem. I, as a consumer, until last year, could not find a place to send my old, burnt out, CRT monitors. Hell, in most areas of the country, most garabage continues to be buried in landfills or incinerated.

      Now, you could say that putting the cost of disposal into the product first seeds money for adequate disposal plants and methods, and I would agree, except we're talking about a political process--a process of concensus, not of getting things done. See, we've done this "seed money" type deals with other industry products in the past (e.g. tires, which are normally taxed at change time) and STILL they ship the crap overseas to be disposed off, put it off to the side (e.g. Philadelphia, they put it under an overpass a few years back, until it burned and took out the overpass), or bury it.

      Where does this money go? Most people aren't sure--usually it's some "general fund" to take care of this sort of thing, but these fail.

      You want proper disposal? It doesn't come with "seed money." Force manufacturers to buy recycled products first. This will incite efforts of recovery and recycling--factories will be built to recover and recycle products to the industry. You find the solution by forcing a cycle. You don't find a solution by saying "you can pay me off."

      Want to know how bad "seed money" is? Recycling is seed money based. There should be recycling for glass, paper, metal, plastic. Where I live, there is none for paper in my area. Most plastic doesn't even get separated by recyling type (those numbers on the bottom). The leaf and compost collection around here is a joke (they come once every 2 weeks, so people have HUGE piles of leaves on the side of the road--they should just tell people to compost on their own). It's a mess. Why? Because the recyclers get government subsidies. They aren't in the collection business to sell what they collect; they are in the business to collect to gather a subsidy. They don't give a rat's ass about the quality of the collection.

      All this legislation will do is force out smaller manufacturers, since only large manufacturers will be able to cut disposal deals on the amount of material they produce (yes, disposal is still a supply/demand based industry). But, as history has shown us (e.g. many current SMALL steel mills, but not all unfortunately), it is these smaller plants that typically are the ones most often updated and have the latest, cleanest methods of production and diposal.

      HP is just throwing their weight around. They get this passed, it will crush the smaller guy.

    17. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by beetinkle · · Score: 1

      We, the people who buy the products, will be burdened with the final cost of disposal and the responsibility to return to an aproved recycling center. I live in rural USA which adds additional cost to return to a recycling center. This is a real problem which needs a real solution. Who will pay is a mute issue, its the people that buy the product that will pay.

    18. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Darth+Hubris · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't mind paying a small fee to take the non-recycleable [i.e. I reuse a case or floppy] parts off my hands.

      --
      The party's over ... the drink ... and the luck ... ran out
    19. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you think people will take an hour of their own time to take their PC down to the special PC recycling center just to get $5-$10??

      Dreeeaaaaamer!
      You're nothing but a dreamer
      Well can you put your hands in your head? Oh no!

      Maybe a few kids will recycle extra computers for arcade game money, at best.

    20. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by joshsisk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So you think people will take an hour of their own time to take their PC down to the special PC recycling center just to get $5-$10??

      Uh, no. I think _businesses_ (who use and dispose of the most computers) will do one of these things:

      1) donate their computers to thrift stores or schools en masse, as many do now, who will then use them if they are useful, or recycle them and get the money if they are useless. The thrift store by my house has literally hundreds of junked computers and monitors - maybe thousands.

      2) let them pile up in storage until they have a truckload. Then they'll have one employee spend 4 hours to make $1000. Much more efficient than spending 1 hour to make $5 or ten.

      3) Sell the computers to companies who buy computers for half the recycling price, then take them to the centers and get the full recycling value. If they actually did start giving $10 recycling deposits back when you recycle a computer, I'd definitely start a business like this. Sounds like a moneymaker.

      4) just keep throwing them away.

      Since most businesses do either 1 or 4 right now, the addition of other options could only be good, in my mind. Especially since, in #1, the burden of disposing of the computers is simply shifted from the business to the charity group or school.

      As far as individuals go, I'd bet that places like CompUSA would start their own recycling center drop-offs (operating on the same lines as option #3 above). People would be more likely to drop a computer off at CompUSA when they were going shopping than they would be to go to a recycling center - even if CompUSA was pocketing half their refund.

    21. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      100 years from now, after recovery methods and technology have advanced, the 'municipal dump heap' and indeed all landfills, will be viewed as a valuable resource. All that plastic and metal and etc. will be strip mined again, and recovered for reuse.

      I know it's more advantageous to fret about how we're going to be one big landfill before long if you have a political agenda in mind, but let's be real.

    22. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      "If we dig little fragments and snippets out of the oral histories of indigenous people, and use them as sound-bites to make our political points, we trivialize their culture, while distorting it to forward our luddite vision for the future."

    23. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, THAT is quite possibly the most intelligent thing I have ever read on Slashdot. I'm so tried of people randomly selecting meaningless passages from essentially aboriginal cultures and putting them forth as some sort of grand explanation of How the World Works, as though they had some amazing Mystical Insight denied to us fumbling philosophical descendants of Western Europe. That whole post was almost entirely nonsense, and displays a lack of understanding of economics and financial accounting that is amazing. You simply can't compare municipal waste process costs and whatever sort of disposal costs (and how they may be calculated) that might be priced in by a manufacturuer. Also, contending that the current consumer oriented lifestyle is untenable is based on nothing (included in the post). And beyond that, the whole thing reaked of thoughtless "environmentalist" ideology. Thank you, I believe I am done now.

    24. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by rapidweather · · Score: 1

      Old pc's? If they still boot, then send 'em to me. Don't throw them away until I see what I can do with them.
      (This post is being made on a Compaq 575 running RHL 6.1, and Opera 6.1)
      -------------
      Here's the mandatory Slashdot "Truth in Posting" statement:
      "Yes, I am using a Compaq 575, but I have an AMD K6-2 processor, and 192 MB of ram, and an S3 Trio 64+ graphics card"
      (more arm twisting from Slashdot)
      "Oh yes, all this is on the Slave HDD. I have Micro$soft Windows 98 on the Master."

    25. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's the third choice: pay for it when you dispose of the item-- which is what we have right now.

      I'm cleaning my garage and I have three mono/EGA monitors to dispose of.

      I've found that there are companies in the San Jose area that will accept these monitors for recycling. They only charge ~$10 each.

      There is, of course, the option of doing the irresponsible thing and simply drop it into some dumpster...

      -cmh

    26. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice save, but that long explanation doesn't match this:

      The problem is that people don't do this. They just throw them away with the normal trash. If you got $5 or $10 for turning it in to a recycling center though, you'd be way more likely to dispose of it properly.

    27. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      Yep, shorter is always better. But the AC I was replying to didn't seem to get that.

      Every company I've ever worked for (that didn't lease) has always just had us do one of three things with old PCs : throw them in the regular garbage, donate it to a school (who will eventually throw them away), or give them to employees.

      It always really bothered me when we would be tossing a dozen or so computers & monitors in the dumpster. We even did this a relatively major state university, where I'd assume there were regulations against throwing away monitors and UPS back up systems (with their big ol' batteries).

    28. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you'd better recheck your comprehension skills. Read the thread again.

    29. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Computer Take Back Campaign was formed in response to the growing amount of computer and electronic waste globally. Check out www.toxicdude.com

      Computers are toxic trash. They contain lead, mercury, chromium, PCV plastic, and countless other heatlh and environmental hazards. The system now to deal with this trash in the U.S. is that cities and towns, which handle trash disposal, are responsible for the collection and "recycling" of obsolete computer junk. In MA alone, cities and towns spend between $6-21 million state-wide for the collection and disposal of just CRT's. That's tax-dollar money being spent, and with local budget cuts prevalent in many areas, I'm sure that money could be much better spend on schools, fire and police departments, etc... Even though cities and towns collect this electronic waste, they have problems dealing with it---only around 20% of old computers are recycled, which usually mean they are exported to third world countries (www.ban.org). If the price for collection and disposal isn't included at the front-end in the purchase price, as it should be, then cities and towns will still have to deal with this waste at the back end. With full producer take back, in order to compete in the market, computer manufacturers will innovate to keep prices down while creating products that are easier and cheaper to recycle. This is the best way to deal with the computer waste issue.

      The EU has recently passed a directive that will require manufacturers of computers and electronics to take back their products when consumers are finished with them. This provides an incentive for manufacturers to design products that are less toxic, more durable, and easier to recycle. In Europe, lots of products, including packaging, are already taken back by the manufacturer (in Germany since 1990). The Computer Take Back Campaign has a platform, outlined on our website, that requires of manufactuers to Take It Back, Make It Clean, and Recycle Responsibly.

    30. Re:Manufacturers bear the costs? by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      I don't look at the threads, I just click the "You have 1 new message" link and go from there.

  5. Be on Notice by Herkum01 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Notice that he said PC manufacturers should bare the burden. So when a PC gets manufactured in Bob's garage, they have to pay the burden. I am sure that it really targeted at companies like Gateway and Dell because they are built on the factory floor in the US, I doubt that companies that get their PC's manufactured in Taiwan will have to pay the fee.

    1. Re:Be on Notice by Traicovn · · Score: 1

      Actually... I imagine that it will be any computer SOLD in the state of California... Of course, it might also mean that you can just take your computer to a local dealer (circuit city, walmart, best buy, etc), and give it to them, and they will dispose of it for you and you pay either nothing (which would be the best thing), or a nominal charge (5-10.00). The costs will already be built into the new computer when you purchase it.

      --

      [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
      {Traicovn}
  6. A couple of links by skatedork · · Score: 4, Informative

    As far as I know, the NEC Powermate Eco is the only computer that has been built with the foresight to have recyclable parts. A look at just how bad things have gotten (re: computer salvaging) can be found here.

    1. Re:A couple of links by Golias · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Don't be suckered.

      Every computer is made with recycled parts. Plastic, aluminum, silicon, hell, even the bread-boards that the circuits are put on could be recycled. The clock battery is just about the only part which is not easilly recylced.

      The problem is, computers and computer materials have become so cheap that it is almost never worth the expense of hiring somebody to bust the thing up into separate materials. Even parts that don't need to be broken down for recycling could be re-used, but aren't. Anybody want a free AT motherboard? How about a 9" floppy disk drive? Didn't think so.

      This will also be the case with that NEC "Eco" in 3-5 years. Obsolete computers are worth less than their raw materials.

      The best way to dispose of an old computer is to not dispose of it. Give it away to somebody who still has use for it. Hell, even an old 286 or Apple II would be a great tool for a young kid to learn about how computers work. Building an operational computer out of junkyard parts would be a hell of an education.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    2. Re:A couple of links by MrEd · · Score: 2
      computers and computer materials have become so cheap that it is almost never worth the expense of hiring somebody to bust the thing up into separate materials.


      I think the reasoning behind this legislation is to encourage computer manufacturers to make their designs more breakdown-and-recycle-friendly. Since they're the only ones really qualified to do it, why not place the responsibility on their heads?


      As an example, Nokia has been preparing for similar legislation by altering the design and manufacturing processes of its phones to make them easily dissasemblable and reuse/recyclable. There's a lot of room for ingenuity, it's just that until a law like this passes there is no incentive for computer manufacturers to spend the extra dollar (or whatever) per unit.

      --

      Wah!

    3. Re:A couple of links by Golias · · Score: 1
      I think the reasoning behind this legislation is to encourage computer manufacturers to make their designs more breakdown-and-recycle-friendly.

      Is that a joke? Computer design should focus on making systems that are easier to break down into base components!?

      I stand astonished.

      I just don't know where to begin.

      Please tell me you are trolling, and don't really believe that the cost/benifit gap of recycling computers is best solved by mandating computers that are easier to break down into base components.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    4. Re:A couple of links by MrEd · · Score: 2
      Whoah whoah, step back a minute. I think you're blowing this entirely out of proportion.


      I didn't say that computer design should 'focus' on recycling, nor did I say that it should be 'mandated' to make computers recyclable.


      My point is that if the cost of computer disposal/recycling was even partially borne by computer assemblers and manufacturers it would generate a market demand for more easily recyclable/disposable hardware.


      There is no need to put in legislation to mandate recycling, that would only be clumsy and stifle manufacturers' design work. A fee for computer disposal would allow companies to decide for themselves what the best ways of dealing with this cost would be. Hopefully the result will be something similar to the progress made by Nokia which I mentioned in my previous post.


      You seem pretty appalled at this suggestion. What is your answer? Send all the PCBs and lead to China?

      --

      Wah!

    5. Re:A couple of links by Golias · · Score: 2
      My suggestion is simple: When you want to get rid of hazardous waste you own, whatever it is: a computer, a battery, a TV set, etc. It is, and should be your personal responsibility to dispose of it properly.

      This is already the law in most places. If you are throwing PC's in the trash right now (especially monitors), you are breaking the law.

      You should not be forced to pay that disposal fee up front, because you might not dispose of it. I can just see the owner of a PC recycling facility trying (unsuccessfully) to argue his way out of paying this fee.

      I'm appalled at the suggestion proposed in the article because in introduces another tax, another barrier to entry in the PC business, and another layer of bureaucracy for the tech industry, while not actually solving the problem any better than improved enforcement of current toxic disposal laws could solve it.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  7. Sure... by lightspawn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anything that increases the barrier of entry is a good thing to a huge business competing with many small ones.

    Oh, and can I please do one of those soviet russia lines again?

    "In Soviet Russia, PCs dispose of YOU!"

    1. Re:Sure... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well said. Here on /. we tend to think that HP competes with Dell and Gateway in the PC business, but the fact of the matter is that most PCs are white-box specials built by some guy in his garage.

      HP simply is trying to cut the little guys out of the picture.

    2. Re:Sure... by Kevin+Stevens · · Score: 2

      Can you quantify that with any real data? Anectodally, I know many people w/ dell's, gateway's, etc... but not that many with home brew. No large or even small companies that I have seen buy their computers from small companies. I think what you are saying could be true, but I wont believe it until some evidence tells me otherwise.

    3. Re:Sure... by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Sure. It's like when Big Oil Filter campaigned for that "disposal fee", in order to shut down all the independent oil filter changing stations. Now, you can only get your oil changed at one of the really big Oil Filter Changing companies. It's impossible to find anyone who'll change it who isn't part of a giant oil changing concern.

      Oh, wait. I'm talking bollocks. And White Box PC manufacturers can simply pay the disposal fee, something that's per-sale, like everyone else, like they did when ethernet boards became standard parts of modern computers, and hard drives became standard parts, etc, etc.

      It's just another tax. It hardly changes the cost of entry into the PC manufacturing business.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    4. Re:Sure... by Golias · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The thing is, many of the big playas in today's PC market, as well as up-and-coming "smaller" national brands, started out as little custom white-box shops. I'm sure that HP doesn't want a plucky little shop like Tran Microcomputers in Minneapolis to start doing mail-order business and become the next Dell, or even the next Omnitech. If the Trans of the world can be driven out of the market, that's one more potential threat that HP can forget about.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    5. Re:Sure... by akb · · Score: 2

      Here's a recent market share report. The top 4 (or 5 if you count hp/compaq seperately) have 41% of the market. That's probably not specific enough to tell whether or not the really smalls play a specific role but it does say that the really bigs don't overly dominate.

    6. Re:Sure... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 4, Informative

      There was a /. article on the subject not too long ago (which I couldn't find), but I did find a couple of links that should prove interesting.

      Here is one that pegs the white box PC market at 30% market share. Dell had the largest market share (as estimated by the same group during the same period) at 17.1%.

      Hope this is helpful.

    7. Re:Sure... by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Can you quantify that with any real data? Anectodally, I know many people w/ dell's, gateway's, etc... but not that many with home brew. No large or even small companies that I have seen buy their computers from small companies. I think what you are saying could be true, but I wont believe it until some evidence tells me otherwise.

      I can back it up to some degree. I built computers (7-10 a day) in a small computer shop for the local small businesses. This was in the bay area, and I can tell you quite a few places that also do this. These are the shops that have a few computer parts out front and if you walk in it doesn't look like you are walking into a real computer store. They make their business by selling 20+ computers a week to the local businesses.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    8. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know this is offtopic, but where did this "In Soviet Russia..." business start?

    9. Re:Sure... by Best_Username_Ever · · Score: 1

      The article doesn't say exactly, but I got the impression that we are not talking about a flat rate tax to account for disposal. More like the company takes control of the disposal themselves. The article mentions that HP already do this for some companies and charge $30.

      I suspect the reasoning behind HP's move is that the markets that they are primarily interested in are more favourable to this kind of policy than your average white-box company. For example, HP could take advantage of the economies of scale in a situation where they are taking control of disposal when one of their customers upgrades 1000 PC's. Whereas the costs for taking control of the disposal of an individual PC by a whitebox manufacturer would be higher. HP would also have better deals with whatever recycling factility they choose to deal with.

      The bottom line here is that this would be an advantage for the HP's, IBM's and DELL's of the world. So the big companies would be more able to compete on price in the consumer market.

    10. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yakov smirnoff

  8. Why not model other recyclables? by bill · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why not model it after the recyclable can and bottle programs that New England states and other areas have adopted? The consumer pays 5 cents extra per can or bottle, and then is refunded when he returns it to a recycling facility.

    Obviously, the scope and content of the program would be different, and more challenging. And the logistics is a lot bigger problem. But with PC prices hitting $500 and less, perhaps a program like that would be feasible.

    1. Re:Why not model other recyclables? by intermodal · · Score: 2

      That's stupid. That implys that computer parts are disposable. Why not encourage re-use rather than disposal? I know of a lot of good uses for low 486 boxes up on through to the new stuff, and it can be used pretty easily if you know how. All this will do is encourage PC junking rather than donation.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    2. Re:Why not model other recyclables? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Uh, the reason that gets to imply that computer parts are disposable is that computer parts are disposable.

      There are few good uses for full-size 486 PCs. They are a waste of space and power. Most of the tasks for which you need a PC can be characterized as follows.

      • If you can get away with a low-end processor (like a 486) you generally need to minimize space and sometimes power use.
      • If you have the room for a complete PC, you generally need more processing power than a 486 can provide.

      There are a few exceptions like the so-called industrial PCs used in smog check equipment (a normal crappy old PC with a filter on the intake fan vent and a keyboard with a skin over it) which do not need much power and can take up a lot of space.

      Lots of people over time have considered clustering, but for what it will cost you in energy to run the number of 486s needed to make up one computer which currently costs $300... you could just buy the $300 computer.

      On the other hand recycling doesn't have to mean destruction. Let's say you charged people $5 when they turned in a dead or otherwise discarded computer, which is what it costs you to get rid of a tire. Someone could instead take them for free, or give you five bucks for them or something, and put them in a shipping container and send them someplace where people would like to have 486s. They could sell them for the cost of shipping, plus the $5 they charged you, plus some percentage markup to make it lucrative.

      Generally speaking, in any country where computers are being discarded, there is little or no practical use for them. Computer parts are eminently disposable, because it costs more to repair them (sometimes even if you do the work yourself, NOT counting the amount of time it takes) than to replace them. If you count hourly charges for work done to repair them, it is almost always cheaper to replace the part. A $45 power supply which takes you half an hour to fix at $30/hour is both $15 spent on labor (plus whatever on parts) and a half hour you didn't spend doing something productive. The power supply is probably the easiest component in a PC to repair, as it is a simple circuit with a single layer PCB. Nearly everything else has a multi-layer PCB and is not worth repairing unless it is unreplacable.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Why not model other recyclables? by akb · · Score: 2

      I took it to mean the opposite. The recycling centers that I'm familar w/ in CA try get as many working computers together as possible from what comes in and donate/sell them. Only things that can't be repaired or are truly obsolete are stripped down to their components and disposed of.

    4. Re:Why not model other recyclables? by espilce · · Score: 1

      Someone could instead take them for free, or give you five bucks for them or something, and put them in a shipping container and send them someplace where people would like to have 486s.

      It's been done before, and I was appalled at the number of ignorant fucks on slashdot that claimed it was stupid idea because of indymedia's political views, etc. But aside from that, recycling pc's to give to people who would not normally have the chance to own one is a very good idea. The only problem I see (especially WRT sending computers to people in countries like ecuador, etc) is that when they do become utterly useless (nothing lasts forever), they will definitely not be recycled, but the tradeoff is well worth it, in my opinion.

      --
      :q!
  9. Recycling by andyring · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Yeah, and Pepsi should pay to get rid of my Mountain Dew cans, Sherwin Williams should pay to take care of those old paint cans in my basement, Goodyear should pay to get rid of the old tires in my garage, Johnson & Johnson should pay to dispose of the mercury thermometer in my bathroom and Napa needs to pay for my old antifreeze and motor oil.

    Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers. Does anyone in their right mind think HP, etc., will simply eat the cost of this? No. The only reason they're doing it is because it's in California (home base of American liberalism), and if they don't, they'll be totally demonized by militant environmentalists and human rights activists playing on your emotions rather than hard, scientific data.

    1. Re:Recycling by bill · · Score: 1
      Perhaps they raise costs, but if they structure it right then the costs will be shared or mitigated nearly entirely and the environment will benefit. No doubt there are tons of technical and logistal burdens to overcome. But recycling has proven to be workable in other industries like aluminum and paper. My uncle, a former VP at International Paper tells me that they can now recycle paper almost 10 times from initial production of highquality document paper to newsprint and packaging. No doubt it initially was a loss for them. But a company like IP doesn't embark on such a huge recycling effort if in the long run it is bad for their company. Recycling does work, and companies have shown that it can be good for business.


      Surely it is at least worth investigating.

    2. Re:Recycling by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers.

      But I don't want to pay hundreds of dollars per year to get filtered or bottled water because of toxic chemicals that leached out of your PC. You should bear the cost for its proper disposal.

    3. Re:Recycling by 241comp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually, most places which sell motor oil and do service work will accept used motor oil. In fact a 1991 South Carolina law prohibits the disposal of used oil in landfills, on the ground, or in waterways. Over 60% of used motor oil is recycled and most of it at no cost to the user (call Jiffy Lube - they'll take your oil for free). I'm not saying that this is the way it should be by law, but it is an option... if PC manufacturers started making PC's recyclable, it would pay them to accept them back. So maybe the answer isn't to require them to accept PC's, but to require all PC parts to be recyclable to some extent.

    4. Re:Recycling by TheSunborn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for >consumers

      That's the point. That the consumer do not only pay for the goods, but also for the needed safe disposel of the goods. What's wrong with that?

      Martin Tilsted

    5. Re:Recycling by ryochiji · · Score: 3, Interesting
      >The only reason they're doing it is because it's in California

      I'm a Californian too, and take pride in living in one of the more (most?) liberal states. Having said that, your assessment seems somewhat naive...

      I tend to give big businesses the benefit of the doubt, and considering how "e-waste" isn't a widely publicized issue (at least nobody's being "demonized" yet), I doubt HP decided to move on their own without ultarior motives (shutting out smaller manufacturer being one possible). Big businesses think about one thing, and one thing only: the bottom line. Even with environmental issues, unless they know for certainty that there are real economic benefits (or losses), they will not budge.

      On a side note, I'm somewhat surprised/disappointed that Apple hasn't taken a more active/aggressive stance on the issue. I mean, Jobs is an ex-hippie health food nut...you'd think he'd think twice before using all those polycarbonates (and yes, I share some of the guilt since I own a icebook).

    6. Re:Recycling by JoeBuck · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In Germany, the scenario you describe is the law: manufacturers are responsible not only for the cost of recycling waste from their products (all products, not just PCs), but assuring that it is actually done, either by taking back one's own waste, or by paying someone else to do it.

      Most companies, especially small ones, comply by joining the Grüne Punkt (Green Dot) program, which takes care of the waste for the company. It doesn't really create a barrier to entry, because the fees are based on weight of packaging material and don't cost a small company any more than a big one.

    7. Re:Recycling by victim · · Score: 2
      There are already incentives in place to get many of those problems taken care of...
      • beverage cans carry deposits in many states. (I'm particularly fond of Manhattan etiquette that says you don't throw your can inside the street garbage can, but place it on top and the nice people come and collect them for the deposit.)
      • many (most?) communities have annual "nasty waste" days where they collect paint. It is mixed into giant lots of vague color and distributed to people that need free paint.
      • nasty waste day will also take mercury (gets recycled)
      • used motor oil goes back for use as fuel I believe, although I've heard that it can be purified and reused I don't think that is cost effective. We used to have a tank at our municipal recycling center for oil, but they had to take it away. It was unattended and people were disposing of hazardous waste by dumping it in the oil tank.
      • anitfreeze, gets recycled by businesses but doesn't pay for itself, many will allow you to drop off, sometimes for a small fee. Better than apologizing to your neighbor for poisoning their pet.
      • where I live there are disposal fees built in to new tire sales. Beats stock piling them indefintely in the basement.


      But look at PCs. Heck, my tires last longer than cheap PCs. There isn't a financial reason to gather old PCs and dispose of them properly. They can have their life extended by being reused or having components reused, but ultimately you are dumping a bunch of lead and other minor nasties into landfill. Sure, its a foreign landfill these days, but kids still play there and drink water from the wells under it.

      Simply filling your basement with old tires and disintegrating paint cans and hoping you die before you finally have to clean it up and let your executors take care of it is a pretty good microcosm of the 1970s, but for a few dollars more you can arrange to have these things properly disposed of.
    8. Re:Recycling by CyNRG · · Score: 1

      You state: "California (home base of American liberalism)"

      Evidently you've never been to Portland or Eugene, Oregon.

    9. Re:Recycling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree completely. Should pampers pay for recycling my baby's used diapers? No, that cost should be placed on the comsumer.

      If the government spent their money on this instead of funding false "environmental research", we'd all be better off.

      In his book Slaughter of the Innocent, antivivisectionist Hans Ruesch provides an account of some of the experiments paid for by the U.S. government. Among them: $500,000 to see why monkeys clench their jaws when angry, $102,000 to compare the effects of gin and tequila on fish, and $525,000 to see if dogs vomit differently from cats.

      I found this qoute from the results of a quick google search, on this page. I haven't read the whole page, I was just looking for some specific numbers I heard about on Quin and Rose in the Morning today, but I couldn't find exactly what I was looking for.

    10. Re:Recycling by gwernol · · Score: 2

      Yeah, and Pepsi should pay to get rid of my Mountain Dew cans, Sherwin Williams should pay to take care of those old paint cans in my basement, Goodyear should pay to get rid of the old tires in my garage, Johnson & Johnson should pay to dispose of the mercury thermometer in my bathroom and Napa needs to pay for my old antifreeze and motor oil.

      Of course they should

      Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers. Does anyone in their right mind think HP, etc., will simply eat the cost of this? No. The only reason they're doing it is because it's in California (home base of American liberalism), and if they don't, they'll be totally demonized by militant environmentalists and human rights activists playing on your emotions rather than hard, scientific data.

      So your proposal is that instead of making the consumers of particular goods pay the cost of their disposal, society as a whole should pay them. A general tax on everyone to pay for the choices of some. Sounds like a good dose of old-fashioned socialism to me. I don't think this is quite what you had in mind...

      --
      Sailing over the event horizon
    11. Re:Recycling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Explain how a corporation that derives every single penny it makes from payments it receives from the consumers who buy its products can possibly share or mitigate the cost of PC disposal?

      Will it do it with some magic money that doesn't come out of the pocket of the consumer?

    12. Re:Recycling by ewhac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers.

      No, the costs are already there, and always have been. What such a law would do is put the costs up front where the consumer can see them, rather than decades down the road, when the consumer is asked to pass a bond measure to pay to clean up a toxic superfund site.

      You might argue that deferring the cleanup affords certain economic advantages, such as economies of scale (clean up everyone's mess at once rather than piecemeal) and availability of newer, cheaper cleanup technologies. But right now, there is precious little development happening on cleanup technologies, because the dumps, "aren't causing any problems" (yet). As for economies of scale, such claimed "economies" become unclear when superfund site cleanup costs regularly push into the billions of dollars.

      So, yes, in an ideal world, you should be paying the disposal costs up front for the simple reason that you're going to be paying it anyway, one way or another.

      Schwab

    13. Re:Recycling by be-fan · · Score: 2

      The problem is that Joe consumer doesn't know about (or care about) hard scientific data. All they care about is whatever is easiest for them. Without outside constraints,t hey will not recycle. Making the manufacturer recycle has the correct effect: it drives up prices and makes Joe consumer bear the cost of cleaning up his own shit.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    14. Re:Recycling by macjohn · · Score: 1

      I think you've got it, even without any "hard scientific data"! If the recycle cost isn't included in the price of the product, then it either gets dumped in a river somewhere or someone else, like taxpayers, has to pay for it. See? No science required. Even you can understand it.

      I don't want to pay for disposing of the paint cans that you bought, and I don't want you to throw them over the fence into my yard either. You own 'em. You're responsible for getting rid of them. You should be happy that, for small fee, someone will take that responsibility for you. And for the guy next door to you that has 10 times as many paint cans he'd like you to pay for.

      Including life-cycle costs in the price of merchandise isn't "radical environmentalism", it's good conservative cost-accounting. Not sure why you bring human rights into this, but I'm sorry your think they're a bad thing too. You must be very unhappy.

      --
      --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
    15. Re:Recycling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think that you're going to be spending hundreds of dollars on bottled water because all municipal water will become a toxic bubbling brew from PCs in landfills, you have bigger issues to worry about. There are some really good psychiatrists out there who can help you get back in touch with reality.

    16. Re:Recycling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with it is that it is based on a false premise. Namely that putting PCs in landfills is going to cause massive death, disease, and pestilence throughout the world. However, if they are right, and there is a massive die-off in the general population, slash-dot nerds may finally have the chance to get a date.

    17. Re:Recycling by n08ody · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter who does the work, consumers always pick up the cost.

      Have you ever bought new tires?

      If you look at your bill, there is a tire disposal fee.

    18. Re:Recycling by Odds · · Score: 1

      Let's call a troll a troll.

      "Playing on your emotions rather than hard, scientific data", eh? Sounds vaguely familiar, for some reason.

      - David

    19. Re:Recycling by bombom · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is not entirly accurate. They charge *you* a oil disposal fee everyrime you get a oil change (atleast here in the midwest thay do).

      Look more carefuly at the bill/receipt they give you, it is usually a buck or buck fitty. :)

      --
      IOException - Can't Speak
    20. Re:Recycling by Golias · · Score: 2
      Yes, he, as an individual, should bear the cost of its proper disposal... when he disposes of it.

      The environment is far better off if he donates it to somebody that has a use for it, and if doing so avoids the disposal cost, he would have incentive to do so. However, if you make him pay for the disposal up front, you can bet for sure he will drop it off at the disposal site he already paid for when he no longer needs it.

      Forced recycling programs often have negative repercusions, becuase the resulting incoming recyclable material ends up being overwhelming. In the US there are currently entire warehouses of paper turning into compost, because we turn our newspapers in to recycling centers much faster than they could ever be recycled. The same thing would happen with a computer recyling program where the cost is built into the price. You would end up with above-ground landfills of computers waiting to be broken down for recycling.

      Besides, there already are proper ways available to dispose of PC's. Call your local city government for information about how to properly dispose of old hardware. You will not be forced to drink bottled water if this law fails to pass. (Actually, if you live in California, you might be forced to buy water anyway. A lot of agriculture goes on in California, and fertilizers & pesticides are much more dangerous to groundwater than an old 386.)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    21. Re:Recycling by rworne · · Score: 2
      Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers. Does anyone in their right mind think HP, etc., will simply eat the cost of this? No. The only reason they're doing it is because it's in California (home base of American liberalism), and if they don't, they'll be totally demonized by militant environmentalists and human rights activists playing on your emotions rather than hard, scientific data

      Well, growing up in California did teach me a bit about the environment, and how a bit of effort can go a long way.

      If you lived in CA since the 70's-80's, and remember the 'Smog Alerts' where you could see the haze in the air, the burning eyes, and the difficulty breathing... Compared to now with much cleaner air. I can't recall the last time we had one of these alerts.

      We pay a good price for all this too. Special CA emissions standards, mantadory smog checks, and who knows what other special taxes, but you can breathe again.

      Environmental whackos are a'plenty here, but they do cause occasional good when they aren't linking hands around old oak trees.
      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    22. Re:Recycling by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      The costs for disposal already come out of the consumer's pocket, but they come out of EVERYONE's pocket, not the pocket of the people actually buying the product. If my town has to pay extra to get hazardous material removed from landfill, MY taxes go up even if I didn't put any of that material there.

    23. Re:Recycling by Greedo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, and Pepsi should pay to get rid of my Mountain Dew cans ...

      Right now, you are paying part of your taxes to get rid of your cans, glass, paper and plastic that your municipality can accept through your recycling program.

      There is no incentive for manufacturers to create more environmentally friendly products because they never see the end-costs of disposal.

      A law like the one proposed, plus some incentives like a fee reduction for companies that make an effort to reduce non-recyclable components, is better way to put the burden on the right folks.

      Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers.

      As has been said before, you'll end up paying for it either way: now through the fee, or later when your ground water is contaminated, etc..

      --
      Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
    24. Re:Recycling by Greedo · · Score: 2

      Another problem that might need addressing is this:

      I need to dispose of my P100, but instead I donate it to someone that could really get some use out of it. In 5 years, that person wants to dispose of it, so they try to pass it off to someone else, but at that point it is *so* outdated that no one wants it.

      They could ship it to a 3rd world country where it would still be useful, but that will just delay the invetiable. Besides, that 3rd world country probably doesn't have a nice recycling facility, so it just ends up in someone else's land fill.

      I think PC recycling will only work if a) there is an upfront fee you pay on purchase of a new computer that goes towards recycling efforts (like a bottle deposit), and b) you receive a refund when you drop off your sick, your tired, your dirty PC at a recycling station.

      --
      Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
    25. Re:Recycling by workindev · · Score: 1

      How about Boulder, Colorado?

    26. Re:Recycling by Wise+Dragon · · Score: 2

      >I doubt HP decided to move on their own without ultarior motives

      Speaking as an employee of HP, I can tell you that we find it both profitable and satisfying to be socially responsible. In this case, it means supporting recycling. In other cases, it means encouraging diversity, corporate philanthropy, etc. Some Multi-National Corporations may be socially and environmentally irresponsible. We aren't one of them.

      "If there's a central message, it is this: corporate citizenship is the foundation of HP's heritage and integral to who we are, what we do--and how we expect to be profitable in the future." - HP

      Viva La HP

      Report on Social and Environmental Responsibilty

    27. Re:Recycling by jACL · · Score: 2

      The key to so much of this is: what goes in, comes out. Right now the issue is stretched between two opposing poles:

      Company: Cut costs as much as possible
      People Affected: Be responsible from Cradle to Grave.

      The best new approach I've seen to this conundrum is in the book Cradle to Cradle, which says that it's a design problem: Don't put it in if you don't want it back out. Instead, design it without toxic materials in the first place. This is a good approach to many different things. It remains to be seen if it can be done for computing, however...

      --
      "It remains to be seen if the human brain is powerful enough to solve the problems it has created." Dr. Richard Wallace
    28. Re:Recycling by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      You already do pay for filtered water ... your local water plant DOES THIS FOR YOU ALREADY.

      if you think the EPA will happily let them send lead and mercury high water on down the pipes then you are just plain old silly.

      municipalities are already getting hammered with the lead and copper levels in municipal water. many towns still have LEAD pipes in the ground carrying your drinking water and they do not exceed the level the EPA allows (undetected in the mass spectromiter results is allowed.. any detection is dis-allowed and requires adding phosphates to react with and precipitate out the lead.)

      Drink your city water.. you'll be safe, unless you are one of those eco freaks that say that chlorine and flouride in drinking water is poison... then go drink from a stream or lake directly :-) thanks!

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    29. Re:Recycling by zvar · · Score: 1

      Thanks for making me get coffee all over the place from laughing.

      HP envro firendly? The company that makes 75% of it's profit from cheap throw away ink carts is envro friendly? Best joke I've heard all week.

    30. Re:Recycling by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 2

      The only reason they're doing it is because it's in California (home base of American liberalism), and if they don't, they'll be totally demonized by militant environmentalists and human rights activists playing on your emotions rather than hard, scientific data.

      *sigh* When you argue that other people are playing on your emotions rather than using hard, scientific data, would you please back up your remarks with hard, scientific data rather than a play on peoples' emotions (i.e. "those dang liberals!")

      If you don't, the irony police are going to eat you alive :)

    31. Re:Recycling by MobyTurbo · · Score: 2
      Yeah, and Pepsi should pay to get rid of my Mountain Dew cans,
      Mountain Dew, the power drink of programmers, happens to be owned by Pepsi, so yes, Pepsico, if anyone, should pay for it. :-)
    32. Re:Recycling by mysticwhiskey · · Score: 1

      Here in South Australia we are the only state in Australia to incorporate a 5c deposit on drink cans & bottles - yes, the consumer pays more, but you know what? You do NOT see any cans or bottles littering the streets here. Paying this small extra amount is not as drastic as you make out, people get used to it pretty quickly. Sure, it raises costs for the consumer, but so what? Does the consumer somehow have some divine right to buy at the best price?

      --

      Stuck down a hole! In the middle of the night! With an owl!

    33. Re:Recycling by Golias · · Score: 1
      Or, you make it illegal to dump them into landfills.

      Which is what is already being done in most communties.

      Instead of fining manufacturers for making something which is hard to throw out, or paying people to recylce, you just disallow throwing them out in landfills, like we do with used motor oil. If you don't want to dispose of your old PC properly, you have the option of leaving it on some shelf in your basement. Your call.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  10. Sad by Apathy+costs+bills · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The world's largest PC maker had persuaded Gov. Gray Davis to veto an innovative e-waste measure in October. Encouraged by HP's shift, state Sen. Byron Sher, D-San Jose, author of the defeated bill, resubmitted e-waste legislation Monday, the opening day of the new legislative session.


    How sad is it that this hugely important piece of legislation is not swayed by the voters but rather by the money required to buy them.

    It makes me ill.
    --
    Kill Trolls Dead. Here's
    1. Re:Sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hopefully you'll die of that illness and let the rest of us get on with life.

      If you think HP is going to do anything but pass the cost of that cleanup right back onto their customers, you're stupid.

  11. HP Wants Manufacturers To Bear PC Disposal Costs by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Translation:

    HP wants its customers to pay for PC disposal, but it knows that regular people would oppose legislation forcing them to do such things. So they make a chivalrous 'pro-environmental' move to legislate that the corporations should pay for disposal.

    But of course the regular people will still pay because the corporations will just factor disposal cost into the purchase price.

    It's the same result as making people directly pay for disposal, but HP looks a lot better and there's no public outcry.

    Nevertheless, I give kudos to HP for recognising that we can't just ship off all our old computers to China and must act responsibly to dispose of them in an environmentally and socially responsible way.

  12. worn out tires by wiredog · · Score: 4, Informative

    In Virginia there's a tire disposal fee you pay when you get new tires.

    1. Re:worn out tires by Golias · · Score: 1
      In Virginia there's a tire disposal fee you pay when you get new tires.

      As well there should be... but this bill is analogous to making Goodyear pay your disposal fee for you.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    2. Re:worn out tires by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying the PC manufacturers won't raise the price to pay for that?

    3. Re:worn out tires by LordNimon · · Score: 1

      Goodyear would never pay the fee. They would simply raise the price of the tire, so that you would be forced to pay the fee. This is a good thing, because otherwise people who throw old tires away would not pay the recycling fee, even though they're still polluting the environment.

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
  13. People dispose of computers? by lowe0 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Judging from the pile of antiquated technology in my basement, I wasn't aware that computers were actually disposable... come on, I know some of you have the same corner of your basement where there's still a 286 motherboard in a pile somewhere.

    1. Re:People dispose of computers? by WhiteBandit · · Score: 1

      We actually still have a complete 286 laying around in our garage. I haven't booted it up in years, so I'm interested if it would still work.

      In fact, I think we still have an old XT sitting around and rotting as well.

      I'm sure this is common for a lot of geeks. How do you get rid of this old hardware? You couldn't even give some of this stuff away if you tried. :-/

    2. Re:People dispose of computers? by prator · · Score: 2

      Why do you have this gem rotting in your basement?

      You can put FancyLinux 11.23b on it, and run it as a firewall/fileserver/home security robot/cheese grater.

      -prator

    3. Re:People dispose of computers? by cyt0plas · · Score: 1

      286? I still have my vintage 8086 lying around. I especially like it's dos 2.11 disk, with a music-playing virtual keyboard written in Basic, using Ascii art, and of course it's "Revolutionary turbo-mode: Switch between 2, 5, and TURBO 8 MHZ with a simple hotkey!" :) Those were the days. Boot up 2400ad in 2mhz mode, then let it go wild in 8.

      --
      Contact Me (got tired of viruses emailing me).
    4. Re:People dispose of computers? by cyt0plas · · Score: 1

      The scary thing is, I am only 18 years old. Of course, the school district I grew up in was having fundraisers to replace their globes because the current ones showed Alaska and Hawaii as territories. The really scary thing is that I'm not kidding. I used to fix the atari and apple games when the tape drives (not the big ones, the cassette drives) screwed up. As long as the game didn't have a weird "PEEK/POKE" instruction, I was fine.

      --
      Contact Me (got tired of viruses emailing me).
    5. Re:People dispose of computers? by intermodal · · Score: 2

      I tend to agree with you...computers aren't disposable. They're goods that aren't necessarily easy to repair if something gets fubared, but until that time, they're still useful to someone somewhere. Something is wrong when even high technology becomes disposable...

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    6. Re:People dispose of computers? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2
      I got rid of all that crap because I knew it was worthless. I do now regret disposing of my IBM PC-1 because it was a classic and it worked perfectly, but that's the way it goes. Besides my external quantum 30MB MFM disk went south anyway, and by that I don't mean it was catching the donkey shows in TJ.

      Face it, unless you have a need for an old machine to replace some old embedded system, you can get replacements for that kind of stuff for next to nothing! The slower mini-itx systems are below $100 now. Couple them with a cheap to free stick of PC100 SDRAM and a ~$5 ATX power supply (if you're not running a boatload of high-power hardware you can generally get away with a crappy power supply) and you've got a hundred times the machine of your old 286.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:People dispose of computers? by mt2mb4me · · Score: 1

      This is mildly off topic, but, what I have always done, is after the basement fills up with crap, i go to inventure place and dump it off on them. For thoes who don't know, Inventure place in the inventors hall of fame, in akron, oh. I am sure there is some sort of thing like it everywere, they use it so kids can play and "invent" worthless crap, kinda like "high-tech" building blocks. The best part is I get a tax write off, for my corporation. (more of a legal thing then a real business)

    8. Re:People dispose of computers? by Greedo · · Score: 2

      But more and more equipment (high-tech or otherwise) is becoming so cheap that the cost of repair out-weighs the cost of buying new.

      My toaster over wasn't working this morning, and I was thinking "Fuck, it'll probably cost $20 for a repair guy to even look at it, and probably another $50 for him to fix it, if he can get the parts. I may as well just buy a new one for $40."

      Same thing goes for $50 cellphones, I bet.

      Unless there is a solution to this problem (either by including the "costs of disposal" into the purchase price, or something else), I don't see an end to it.

      --
      Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
    9. Re:People dispose of computers? by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      nothing older than a 486.. I cleaned recently.. but I do keep around every dead pentium or newer motherboard I can get my hands on. I love building electronic devices of my own design, and cince surface mount stuff is really easy if you take the time to learn it I now have a basically never ending supply of parts. logic chips, resistors, caps, transistors, diodes, you name it.. and the cool part is most of it is labelled (you have to know how to read them) and they are easily used and re-used. Hell I found a old controller board at work they were chucking that had 4 16f84 PIC chips on them. They are re-programmable and very cool. plus with saving me $4.95 each plus the resonators for driving them... I'm able to do more with electronics now then when I went to school! (majored in electronic engineering minor Microbiology.. wierd I know.. but the microbiology kept me employed well until I got into the IT field. :-)

      got junk computers Pentium or newer? gimmie gimmie!

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    10. Re:People dispose of computers? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      There are trivial solutions, they just aren't being taken advantage of at this time.

      Any older PC has a lot of parts that could be reused. The case, power supply, drive bays, etc. Someone just needs to get slick with one of those mini-atx boards. Make one that can be plugged in and bolted down in any old PC, using the case and keyboard. Unplug the power supply connector from the old PC, plug it into the new unit.

      In a near-future world where resources dry up (i.e. the post-scarcity scenario), that is almost inevitably what will happen with the old machines. There's no reason to continue to use up steel/plastic/etc. making new cases, power supplies, etc. A well-designed 'upgrade-anything' board could use existing monitors, keyboards, maybe even CD drives.

  14. Getting Clean(er) by Traicovn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm glad to see a technology maker taking this on. I know that it's going to result in higher costs to consumers in the end, but honestly the cost will be trivial compared to the total value of the item you are purchasing. I imagine it's not the exact same bill (I don't have the bill in front of me) but it could simply be the way that something is worded that significantly changed the stance of HP/Compaq on the issue. Waste, whether it is technology related, or other, is a problem for everybody... we all create it, however few want to deal with it... Kudos to HP/Compaq for getting on the bandwagon... Glad to see someone trying to make it a truly clean(er) industry.

    --

    [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
    {Traicovn}
  15. GOOD !!! by Brigadier · · Score: 2



    this is an interesting trend which I think I like .... I think. Cigerette companies having to pay for rising health costs (have you priced health insurance lately) PC mfg paying, or being taxed for hardware recycling, and hopefully automobile mfg paying for the affects of smog. Think about it company after company have come and raped natural resources, polluted the environment, and made money from potentially harmful products, and gotten away with it. With tax payers being made to clean this crap up.

    1. Re:GOOD !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consumers rape natural resources and pollute the environment Large companies merely provide consumers the tools to do it.
      If you care so much, why did you buy your computer in the first place? And I hope you have a very short commuter in a very fuel efficient car.
      There are tradeoffs to everything, and we are choosing convenience (computers) over the environment.

  16. Simple reason why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    small cornershop PC whitebox assemblers wouldn't be able to afford this. It'd put them out of business.

    1. Re:Simple reason why by Traicovn · · Score: 1

      How will this put them out of business if it is a flat disposal fee that is attached to all computers? Everybody will have their prices going up $xx.xx. Perhaps you can further enlighten me to your logic...

      --

      [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
      {Traicovn}
    2. Re:Simple reason why by Thanatopsis · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I can't believe the litany of responses on slashdot.

      "It will put the white box manufacturers out of business, that's why HP is doing it"


      "doubt that companies that get their PC's manufactured in Taiwan will have to pay the fee."

      If you guys had bothered to read the article you would have noticed that recent coveraage over HP's practices in China were one of the motivating factors in making this decision. And yes it's much easier to pass a cost on to a customer when it's law. Let's remember that computers are highly toxic Your average 19 inch moniter have 9 lbs of leaded glass to prevent radiation exposure. Here's my favorite quote


      aws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers. Does anyone in their right mind think HP, etc., will simply eat the cost of this? No. The only reason they're doing it is because it's in California (home base of American liberalism), and if they don't, they'll be totally demonized by militant environmentalists and human rights activists playing on your emotions rather than hard, scientific data.


      Hard scientific data?Here you go
      Here

      I mean really to be conservative, means to conserve. Being a conservative means that you actually want to leave a cultural and environmental legacy to your children. When's the last time you were able to go fishing in Silicon Valley and eat the fish? Certainly not in the last 20 years due to the high heavy metal content of the fish. Every state in the union has health advisories on the heavy metal content in rivers. Take a look here at the US governments own studies
      >EPA Maryland for example. Notice that every ssingle pollutant is an industry pollutant. This even impacts the land of a Thousand Lakes (Minnesota)Fish Consumption


      I love posters that can't think about the consquences of their actions. Once you have kids you begin wondering about the type of legacy you leave behind. I guess we can just tell our kids "Sorry the environment is toxic but some slashdotter wanted to save $35." Get real

    3. Re:Simple reason why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the flat fee wil be a greater PERCENTAGE increase in the price of a cheaper computer.

      Good grief. Doesn't anyone learn math or economics anymore?

    4. Re:Simple reason why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would hardly call an advocacy paper by an environmental PAC hard scientific data.

      Nor would I put much stock in EPA studies, esp. when you consider they have a vested interest in creating environmental issues instead of solving them.

      A quick look at historial EPA data will show that they continually adjust their baseline upward so that they can claim environmental catastrophe is just around the corner unless such and such a law is passed and their budget expanded to administer it.

      The FACTS are, air and water (with a few localized exceptions) are CLEANER today than they were twenty years ago. Of course, if the EPA mentions that, they might lose their funding...

    5. Re:Simple reason why by Golias · · Score: 2
      I find it interesting that you talk about monitors to emphasize how toxic computers are.

      Computer monitors, like TV sets, are already banned from landfills in nearly every municipality in the US. You can't throw a monitor in your trash, and if you try, the trash collector is not allowed to take it. Those who do face very stiff fines.

      Computers themselves have almost no lead, and the clock battery is pretty much the only toxic element. (By the way, throwing away batteries in landfills... also illegal.)

      This bill is not about cleanign up the environment. It gives us no assurance that HP (or whoever) will handle my discarded PC's more responsibly than I will. All it does is create a new barrier to entry for small computer makers.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    6. Re:Simple reason why by jefflinwood · · Score: 2

      And oddly enough, the reason air and water are cleaner today than they were 20 years ago is because of environmental regulations from the EPA and state agencies.

  17. Service vs. Object? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't it seem as though it's the purpose of the PC that is more important than the object itself? As one says "Nobody really wants a drill...what they really want is a nice hole in something..."

    It seems as though there is a multitude of things that could become a service rather than a object to posess and in the end, would be more efficient both costwise and environmentally.

  18. Seriously wtf by dakers27 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If adopted, proponents say, such a law could pave the way for federal regulations on computer recycling, How about national recycling of more commonly thrown away things like glass, plastic, paper etc...? It may be too expensive for smaller communities but it would be much more efficient if done on a national level. Sure it would be nice to be able to recycle PC's, but i throw out alot more beer bottles than i do computers :P

    1. Re:Seriously wtf by Traicovn · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the costs ultimately fall on the consumers and since recycling is usually considered to be part of waste management it falls on the local/county/state governments. Your taxes pay for waste disposal. Try convincing people to have their taxes raised, it's like pulling teeth. I honestly don't have a problem with my taxes being raised, or new taxes being added if I can see the difference, if I can see a result, however you would not get widespread support like this and it MIGHT even get branded as socialist/communist (think national socialized health care). What would actually be a better system would not be a national recycling program but to have more federal funds earmarked and available to local govt's that choose to use them to create recycling centers and recycling programs so that it is affordable for them.
      That's just my opinion though.

      --

      [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
      {Traicovn}
    2. Re:Seriously wtf by dakers27 · · Score: 1

      I agree, what i was trying to say was that the federal government should worry about other types of recycling that would keep more waste out of landfills before they tackle PC's.

    3. Re:Seriously wtf by Traicovn · · Score: 1

      Of course. I don't mind them trying to tackle pc's. All waste is an issue, it's not an issue anybody wants to deal with however...
      As far as where the article states that it might set a precedent for federal regulations, I doubt that very much, especially with an unstable economy. It may set a precedent at the state level, and we may see similar laws, however I doubt that we will see any sort of national legislation, at least not at this time. I think that the writer of the article chose the wrong word or terminology, and perhaps was thinking just a few steps ahead of himself.
      I do agree with you however that other types of wastes which are much more prevelent in society need to be tackled as well. I don't think that this model will apply to all industries (making the industry [of course ultimately the consumer] pay) but it's an interesting one. I know that where some of my relatives live in Pennsylvania they have mandatory recycling of newspapers and plastic (which is a good thing to see), however in the remote part of Mississippi where I go to school, recycling is hardly even on the radar screen.

      --

      [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
      {Traicovn}
  19. What irony... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that this would be reported by "the Mercury News."

    Think about it.

  20. Nastiness... by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My bugbear isn't PC's and Consumer Electronics so much as composite packaging. See those drink boxes they've been pushing the last ten years? How do you cost effectively recycle paper/aluminum/plastic containers? And I don't mean just crush them into a little cube and use them for filler in junk made of molded various plastics in park benches, etc. The packaging industry has a lot to answer for, too, as landfills are really cloggin up with composite junk you can't recycle.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Nastiness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The entire trash output of the US for the next century could fit in one square mile of landfill 300 feet deep.

      Junk science propaganda flows as freely as soy milk on these forums. Just goes to show that educated intelligent.

    2. Re:Nastiness... by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      The entire trash output of the US for the next century could fit in one square mile of landfill 300 feet deep.

      If it were well managed, it would produce enough natural gas to eliminate the need for fossil fuels for several power plants. Too bad most of that just goes into the atmosphere.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  21. HP business plan by r_j_prahad · · Score: 2

    1. Manufacture mountains of PC-related waste.
    2. Promote laws to subsidize PC waste disposal.
    3. Apply for those selfsame government subsidies.
    4. Profit!

  22. YOU PAY FOR IT ANYWAY. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The way you wind up paying for it is by them jacking up prices on you, and not my a proportionate amount. Buy a pack of smokes lately? Ever wonder why the fucking things are like $5 a pack? They have to pay off all those jury judgments somehow! If you think they're going to cash in their CEO's golden parachute to pay it off, go back to sleep and stop annoying the fuck out of the rest of us.

  23. Although this is probably a good thing... by dogas · · Score: 1

    We all know who's eventually going to bear the costs in the end. I wouldn't be surprised to soon start seeing an "end-of-life" disposal fee included with the cost of the computer.
    This would be kind of tricky because you have to keep track of each and every part. Each part would have its own recycling or waste fee. Parts that are wickedly bad for the environment will cost more to recycle than others. Some parts of computer monitors contain really horrible stuff (read: lead, cadmium, mercury) that should never be thrown in a landfill.

    --
    'When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.' -HST
    1. Re:Although this is probably a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why SHOULDN'T you pay for the disposal fee? You used the product. You "consumed" it! Jeeze, the "anyone but me" syndrom around here is choking.

  24. Yeah, there needs to be something done ... by LoudMusic · · Score: 2

    But what about automobiles? Who's paying for the disposal of them? How about old stereos and all the different media types like records and cassettes?

    Great that a big company appears to be concerned about their product, but I think there are additional fish to fry. When Pontiac takes responsibility for all the trash they're generating (double meaning intended ... ?) then I'll be impressed by corporate action.

    I guess geeks don't see the disposal of computers as a major issue, though. We have stacks of old computers in our bedrooms with everything humming along nicely. whether it's doing anything or not, we're not likely to throw it out (:

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:Yeah, there needs to be something done ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But what about automobiles? Who's paying for the disposal of them?"

      Car manufacturers (in EU).

      "The law says car makers must cover the cost of tough new rules on stripping toxic parts from old vehicles and recycling most of the waste."

      http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/news id /18279/newsDate/23-Oct-2002/story.htm

    2. Re:Yeah, there needs to be something done ... by LoudMusic · · Score: 2

      Oh ... guess I had my ignorance flapping in the breeze again ... (:

      Thanks for the info!

      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    3. Re:Yeah, there needs to be something done ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They turn old cars into scrap metal. Melt them down you know? you have obviously never disposed of a car in any manner other than leaving it on the side of the road or trading it in for a new one. Yes, you do pay a disposal fee to the dump/wrecker if you dispose of your car... You do not get paid for it...

    4. Re:Yeah, there needs to be something done ... by be-fan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Automobiles are a big problem, especially here in Land O' Disposable Cars(TM). We had a 1990 Toyota that will probably last another couple of decades with various successive owners, while our 1997 Dodge started showing its age years ago. It's especially important given the less friendly materials being used these days in car construction (metals are pretty easy to recycle compared to some of the stuff that's going into cars these days).

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  25. raising barriers to entry by havaloc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real reason they are doing this is because they want to raise the barriers to entry for new competitors. It doesn't require much of an investment to become a PC manufacturer (anyone can assemble the parts and sell them online out of their house). The HP/Compaq juggernaught can afford this, smaller manufacturers cannot.

    1. Re:raising barriers to entry by Thanatopsis · · Score: 1

      Sorry but Dell is doing a pretty good job of putting the white box manufacturers out of business on price alone. Given the efficiencies in the Dell supply chain why would you buy from a white box manufacturer when Dell is undercutting them $200? I am also quite certain that companies will spring up to offer these sorts of services for white box manufacturers as well. Just like you can use contract manufacturing right now.

    2. Re:raising barriers to entry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But at the same time it creates opportunities for aspiring entrepreneurs in the recycling business.

    3. Re:raising barriers to entry by pavera · · Score: 2

      what white box manufacturer is dell undercutting by $200??? Some crappy white box makers you know.
      I undercut dell by 4-500 and I use better parts.
      of course this legislation will put me out of business so thats sad for my clients, as I could never afford to recycle the boxen I sell...
      oh well

    4. Re:raising barriers to entry by Reziac · · Score: 2

      I think you're exactly right. California is the land where clone shops are king -- but tacking on another $30 or so (and I'd guess it will be at least that much) per system could tip a lot of them out of business, especially the newer shops that are still trying to generate a customer base.

      HP probably figures if they can kill clone shops, they can take over that market segment.

      Here's a thought: in home building, you only need permits for a "new structure" IF you build it from the ground up. But if there is so much as ONE WALL still standing from an existing structure, you can get much-cheaper "additional construction" permits. As a parallel, occurs to me that if this recycling extor^H^H^H^H fee is only applied to sales of complete *new* PCs, a workaround for clone shops is to only do "upgrades" -- where whenever possible, at least one component (no matter how trivial) from the buyer's old system is included, so the purchase is not truly a "new" PC.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  26. This will not happen by teamhasnoi · · Score: 5, Funny
    Bush is in the White House, so probably no law will get passed. If it does, it will be 400 pages long, and allow the FBI to come to your house, take your computer and dump it in Anwar. Then, a few months later, Bush will send a "Reclamation Team" to go and 'dig it up'. "Look! We found oil! Since we're already here, might as well 'dig that up' too.

    If you're Republican, and are offended by my comment or mod it down, it proves you have a small weiner.

    Don't say I didn't warn you...

    1. Re:This will not happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      southpark "republicans will destroy the environment"

      and the democrats wont???
      they pretend to be for those things, do they do anything, ummmm no.

    2. Re:This will not happen by FroMan · · Score: 1

      Bush is in the White House, so probably no law will get passed. If it does, it will be 400 pages long, and allow the FBI to come to your house, take your computer and dump it in Anwar. Then, a few months later, Bush will send a "Reclamation Team" to go and 'dig it up'. "Look! We found oil! Since we're already here, might as well 'dig that up' too.



      And if we had Clinton still in office? Still probably no law, but if it did get passed, it'd allow secret service to come to your house, escorting Bill, he'd search your harddrive for porn, order the machine confiscated, have it to be brought to the oval office with an intern. Then the you'd get it back with stains, he'd claim that he didn't have sex with it.

      Had Algore been president, he'd have the machine confiscated because of DMCA violations as he invented the internet. You'd then be thrown in the nearest "why the government handles your money better than you can" rehabilitation center.


      If you're Republican, and are offended by my comment or mod it down, it proves you have a small weiner.


      If you're a Democrat/Green/whatever else, and are offended by my comment or mod it down, it proves that you have more in common with Dolly and the rest of the free (think like everyone else on slashdot for karma) thinking slashdot liberals. Oh, and probably have a small weiner too.


      Don't say I didn't warn you...


      Take this warning about as much as the one above.

      --
      Norris/Palin 2012
      Fact: We deserve leaders who can kick your ass and field dress your carcass.
    3. Re:This will not happen by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1, Troll

      Last time I checked, Bush isn't the governor of California, and the article was about California legislation, not federal. Since the last election, every single state office in California is held by a Democrat.

    4. Re:This will not happen by medscaper · · Score: 0, Troll
      This is my favorite comment so far...

      If you're Republican...it proves you have a small weiner.

      Can I misquote you on that? :)

      --
      Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
    5. Re:This will not happen by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2
      You will note that I didn't clamor for Clinton or Gore to be President. I don't think that either Democrat or Republican equals a good choice, since they are the same party with hands in different cookie jars.

      When voting is fair, media coverage is balanced for all canidates, marketing is replaced by actual issues, and conflict of interests are non-existent, I might stop complaining.

      Until then, I'll wonder what that white powder is on Bush's nose. And how people are guilty until proven a terrorist. And when I can stop fearing my own Government, Inc.(TM) And wtf inspires people to vote Republican/Democrat when all the choices are sh!t.

  27. Paper Computer by Wiseazz · · Score: 1

    I'm still waiting for the recyclable paper pc. I've yet to even see one of those paper cell phones, though...

    I guess we'd have quite a few cooling hurdles to overcome before the paper pc roles around, though :)

    --
    My sig sucks.
    1. Re:Paper Computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was NEVER a paper phone. It was a scam. Though something like that may happen far FAR into the future, don't go waiting for it now.

  28. Lifetime of PC components (reduce, reuse, recycle) by Gothmolly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Am I the only one who remembers PC components with a near-infinite lifetime? I just threw out, not because it died, but because my S.O. complained about the floor space, the very first Linux box I ever built. A 386sx with 8MB of RAM, ISA NE2000 clone NIC, and a 420MB Seagate disk. It still booted. The motherboard dated around 1990. Nowadays, it seems that stuff is replaced within a few years, NOT because of the endless MS upgrade treadmill, but because things simply crap out...
    With a spate of recent PC component reliability problems (HD warranties, bad capacitors, etc.), we're shifting to a more disposable PC market (ever wonder why a whole system, incl. monitor, can be had for less than $500 ?)
    The solution is to purchase quality components, avoid the "upgrade your HW or die" FUD, fight off PHBs who want shiny new P4-3GHz boxes, and instead concentrate on value.
    THAT'S the solution to PC recycling costs - stop throwing so many away!
    I'm still using a box I built from components thrown away by various clients, it suits me perfectly.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  29. What a simplistic view. by pgrote · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wow, I would love to have your outlook on things.

    Too bad we live in a society where companies are expected, gasp, to make money. How do they do that? They charge for goods and services.

    Who pays for these goods and services? Their customers.

    Who are their customers? You and me.

    We'll end up paying for it all.

    As for cigs ... doesn't it strike you as funny that:

    1) All but five states have already spent their tobacco money on non-tobacco related expenditures?
    2) That the tobacco companies were allowed to continue to sell cigs? Why if they are so bad? The states need the money from taxes.
    3) That states knowing that cigs are so bad continue to tax them at a high rate and use the money for their general revenue funds.

    Regardless of whether you think PCs should be disposed of properly or not you're kidding yourself if you think this impacts the company one bit. It doesn't. It allows them to charge for it.

    Don't believe me? Look at your phone bill under the Universal Service Charge.

    1. Re:What a simplistic view. by Golias · · Score: 2
      You also missed:

      4) Smokers actually save health insurance plans money, because most smokers die young and quickly, while non-smokers tend to live long enough to get debilitating illnesses and survive for decades while making multi-thousand dollar medical claims every year.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  30. flaw in the plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I lived in New Hampshire for sixteen years, and they were the only state around there that didn't have the added price to recyclables. When I was a boy scout, we would collect as many of these cans as possible, and bring them to Mass. to recycle them, collecting the money and using it to fund our troop. This brought in somewhere in the vicinity of $600 per year. This was all well and good for us, but the recycling companies were losing that $600, plus the money from everyone else from out of state who never pay this "recycling tax".

    A program like this only works if people in every state (every country?) Pay the same amount, so you can't simply take your PC across the border to the next state and make an extra $50 on it (assuming recycling costs are higher). For every extra $50 you make this way, that's $50 that the company trying to do the "right thing" loses.

    ~CODEmage~

    P.S. When my boy scout troop realized that this was wrong, we stopped, and moved to other alternatives. We found a recycling place in New Hampshire that would pay per pound of aluminum, and although we made less money, we weren't ripping anyone off.

    1. Re:flaw in the plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's good you figured that out before you got caught. The penalty for redeeming out-of-state bottles and cans carries a hefty fine!

      From www.mass.gov:

      "Any person who attempts to redeem empty beverage containers that he/she knows, or has reason to know, were not originally sold in Massachusetts as filled beverage containers is subject to a civil penalty of the greater of one hundred dollars for each container or twenty-five thousand dollars for each tender of containers."

    2. Re:flaw in the plan by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      If the recycling company paid you for the cans, they were idiots. The cans that you pay a deposit for are clearly marked, NH cans have no such marking.
      Any of the automated can crunching machines will reject them (I have relatives in NH, and sometimes the NH cans get mixed in with the 5 cent ones).

      Good to see you did the "honest" thing though, being boyscouts and all. But why didn't you just go to Mass and collect legitimate 5 cent cans that the insensitive clods throw out.

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    3. Re:flaw in the plan by daddymac · · Score: 1
      If the recycling company paid you for the cans, they were idiots. The cans that you pay a deposit for are clearly marked
      You're absolutely right, cans are clearly marked. My Coke can (I'm in Oregon) says "Oregon 5 cent Refund - California Cash refund" So I assume that even though I bought the can in Oregon, I can take it to CA to get the Cash refund. This "Blue Sky" Black Cherry can is labeled "VT NY IA MA 5cents ME OR CT - CA Cash refund - MI 10cents" so theoretically the 5 cent bottle deposit I paid at Fred Meyer in Portland can be refunded in several states, and I can get double my refund in Michigan!
      --
      If something I said can be interpreted two ways, and one of the ways makes you sad or angry, I meant the other one.
    4. Re:flaw in the plan by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      Be careful trying to double your refund. I belive Newman and Kramer have a business process patent on this technique.
      The licensing costs may negate any potential profit from the refund.

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
  31. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Aexia · · Score: 0, Troll

    1. The computers dispose of you!
    2. ???
    3. Profit!

    1. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by theperplepigg · · Score: 0, Redundant
      1. The computers dispose of you!

      imagine a beowulf cluster of computers...disposing of you!

      --
      -- Every time you kill a kitten, God masturbates.
  32. Just remember by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just remember that when a company has added cost, they pass it on to the consumer.

    I think a better question would be why aren't we don't "recycle" more PCs. (Donate them to schools, non-profit orgs, etc. There are a lot of us out their that could put an old pc to good use.)

  33. bottle deposit nothing more that revenue stream by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bottle deposit law is nothing but a revenue generator for the states. I find it really aggrivating to have to haul all of your bottles and cans to the supermarket or redemption center. Half the bottles end up in the trash. The states know this! While this is good news for the state treasury, the environmental impact is undoubtedly negative. Instead of funding a bottle redemption program, the state should subsidize community curbside recyling.

    But once these short-sided bottle deposit programs are started, good luck trying to stop them. The New England states, particularly Massachusetts, are experiencing a big budget crunch. They certainly aren't going to revoke the 5 cent bottle deposit law. The treasury depends on it way too much. That's why I buy soda and beer in New Hampshire now.

    It's a shame it has to be this way.

    1. Re:bottle deposit nothing more that revenue stream by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why I buy soda and beer in New Hampshire now.

      Can you honestly say that's the only reason you do? Are you sure it's not the lack of sales tax in NH, or the simple fact that NH is generally better than Mass?

    2. Re:bottle deposit nothing more that revenue stream by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Touche!

      How about it's just one of the reasons why I buy most things in New Hampshire?

    3. Re:bottle deposit nothing more that revenue stream by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      And people wonder what would happen if liberals had complete control of the Federal Gov't. This is a perfect example, albeit at the state level.

      Note that this IS a tax and it DOES affect poor more than the rich. So much for the liberals being there to stand up for the poor. :)

    4. Re:bottle deposit nothing more that revenue stream by Planesdragon · · Score: 2

      Note that this IS a tax and it DOES affect poor more than the rich

      Oh, come off it.

      The REAL poor can't afford computers--and they're likelier to purchase bottom-shelf five-times-used PCs and keep them forever, while it's the well-off that "upgrade" by replacing the entire machine.

      You might as well say that cigarette taxes effect the poor more than the rich--when they really target SMOKERS, and not the rich or the poor.

    5. Re:bottle deposit nothing more that revenue stream by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      The REAL poor can't afford computers-

      True. But re-read my post. I was commenting on the Democratically imposed 5-cent "tax" on bottles, not the computer disposal fee. The 5-cent bottle tax affects poor people more than rich people because it makes up a larger percentage of their income.

      You might as well say that cigarette taxes effect the poor more than the rich--when they really target SMOKERS, and not the rich or the poor.

      Yes, but assuming that rich and poor smoke in equal percentages, it affects the poor more than the rich because, again, a tax that doubles the price of cigarettes is going to represent a larger percentage of the poor person's available income. This is especially true with products such as cigarettes that, due to being addictive, can pretty much be taxed at almost any level--and both rich and poor will find the money to supply their addiction--but it hurts the poor more because they have less disposal income to "absorb" the tax. We're talking Econ-101 here...

      But first step: Re-read the original thread and my original post so you understand I was commenting on the bottle tax, not computer disposal tax.

  34. Why pay when they end up in landfills anyway? by coinreturn · · Score: 1

    What a bunch of baloney. After my house burned down (due to neighbor's stupidity), all the old computer hardware formerly acting as door stops are hauled to the junkyard along with the kids' GI Joe's and Harry Potter crap. Does Hasbro or Disney have to pay up for their garbage?

    A much more important initiative would be to tax the fast food industry for all the landfill fodder they produce for every kids' meal.

  35. ...Another Compaq Side-Effect? by cyt0plas · · Score: 1

    Perhaps HP feels that, since they are now a very large corporation (they were a large corporation before, so I guess they are now a HUGE corporation), they can afford to engage in practices designed to hurt their competetors bottom line, even if it hurts them in doing so. Bonus points for making yourself look good in the process.

    --
    Contact Me (got tired of viruses emailing me).
  36. send them back where they came from by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just return the dead PCs to Indonesia, Thailand, Sunnyvale or someother godforsaken place where they were made for deposit on a trash heap?

  37. gimme my $2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " I think $4 wouldn't be enough money for me to flip out about"

    You're forgetting your audience.
    "$4?!!
    Four dollars?!!!
    That's buy enough blank CDR's for me to store 13Mb of stolen mp3's on!"

  38. How could this be enforced... by Montag2k · · Score: 1

    ... with the smaller manufacturers?

    What constitutes a PC? A motherboard? What if I upgrade my motherboard? This legislation would raise too many questions for the small Mom n' Pop operations. I just can't see where the money should come from.

    It just seems as if the only way to calculate the cost for an actual PC to recycle is to get the cost when it comes time to recycle it!

    -Montag

  39. PC Disposal?? by tomzyk · · Score: 2

    People actually dispose of their old computers? I still have every computer I've ever purchased. (2 are running full-time and the third sits in my attic awaiting a monitor (or switch to work with the other 2) for Christmas.) My parents even still have their first few computers (Apple II, AppleII clone, 386, 486) burried somewhere in their basement.

    The old computers should always be kept, whether it's to scavenge for parts or just to make a science project (or BattleBot) look cool. :)

    --
    Karma: NaN
  40. What This Means by jeramybsmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This means HP has found an economical way to dispose of waste that they think would give them a competitive advantage over their competitors if they were all forced to pay disposal fees.

    --
    Never overestimate the end user. -jeramy b. smith
  41. Call me a Cynic, but... by Orne · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I try to be fair to these companies, but the salmon on doubt keeps nibbling on my toes... For a thought experiment, suppose California's e-Waste bill goes through, and suddenly the responsibility for disposal is removed from the consumer?

    First, I won't be surprised if California signs this one, as it would clear the State from the costs of disposal, clearing up lots of tax dollars for the other social programs in their nearly-bankrupt budget. The Politicians can then say, look at all the money this bill saved!

    Second, I don't see "distributor" named, I see "manufacturer". With a quick Google search, I can see that Hewlet Packard happens to own advanced supply-chain-management software, where HP can purchase cheap parts from other manufacturers, put them in their machines, then scoot them out the door. Quote: "A plastic printer cover, for example, may start its life overseas as goop at a resin manufacturer, which works with a plastics compounder to provide the material to an injection molder. That injection molder, in turn, sells its finished parts to a manufacturer, which puts the product together for HP."

    Wouldn't you think that since HP out-sources so much of their manufacturing, what's to stop them from saying, "I didn't manufacture this, our records show Wang's Plastics did, so it's their responsibility to manage disposal!" HP, and all the other big "Silicon Valley" computer companies will just pass the buck back to the original manufacturer, HP will keep their profits, and the little supplier will be hosed.

  42. Re:Recycling - Big Business by andyring · · Score: 2
    >Big businesses think about one thing, and one thing only: the bottom line.

    I loathe this mentality. EVERYTHING exists for the bottom line, big business, small business, non profits, governments, my wallet, everything. Businesses, large or small, are in business to make money. Whoever said that was wrong? You seem to imply that it's morally wrong for a company to want to make money.

    I would actually disagree with your statement and its related inference. "Big Business" thinks about a lot more than the bottom line, they think about bad press, political influence, etc. Granted, it's likely related to the bottom line, but my boss (over all of 9 people in my company) thinks about the bottom line just as much, if not more than, Carly Fiorni. And I care about my personal "bottom line" as much as Fiorni cares about HP's.

    HP and other companies certainly could do this on their own, and if they TRULY cared, they would. I take my cans, newspaper, milk jugs, etc., to the city recycling place regularly. I don't get paid for it, it's not in my monetary interest, but I do it because I support recycling. If HP thought similarly, they would simply do it and not need to pass a law. Seems it's only about eliminating competition from the little guys, which is sad.

  43. How About Rammed P.C. Housing? by flyneye · · Score: 1

    Rammed P.C.housing. same concept as rammed earth.
    This really fits the CALenvironut lifestyle.Just make wallforms,drop in p.c.s ,monitors,keyboards,printers,scanners,etc.pack em in with something heavy and pour acrylic,concrete or some snot to hold it all together and VIOLA,youve recycled the nutty california way.even enclosed hazardous materials to protect the environment.hmmm now that im thinkin of it.they could use nukewaste the same way.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    1. Re:How About Rammed P.C. Housing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your are truly an idiot. You obviously don't know this fact, thus you posted this giberish. So I thought I'd be friendly and point it out. Like having a piece of spinage stuck to your teeth. Someone has to tell you or you'll never know.

      So now that you know, you can save futher embarassment by not posting any more. 'Kay?

    2. Re:How About Rammed P.C. Housing? by flyneye · · Score: 1

      WHAT ARE ANONYMOUS COW AND WHY WE KEEP GETTING POST FROM IT?
      sorry bud, i aint one of your relatives.unless you have some credible argument i guess youre just the idiot as evidenced by your neglecting to post a name to your wrong opinion.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  44. cradle to cradle and remanufacturing by eyepopping · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why not design computers to be remanufacturable? That is, parts can be reused (like with toner cartridges), chemicals extracted, resold, whatever. Maybe HP realizes they can do this in other businesses, why not computers? EU is driving a lot of this, and yes cars are next. Okay maybe not for a while.

    If the price of a box is artificially low because of abuse of the commons, or the disparity in flow characteristics of capital versus labor, or other official or unofficial subsidies, we end up paying for it one way or another.

    If we leased the thing instead of buying it, the OEMs would have incentive both to design for remanufacture, and to keep prices down.

    1. Re:cradle to cradle and remanufacturing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe even, like remanufactured toner cartridges, it can significantly shorten the life of whatever it's placed in!

      Anyone who is stupid enough to use reman toner cartridges to save a couple of bucks needs to be smacked around a little by whoever has to continually replace gear drives/etc in all the printers getting destroyed.

    2. Re:cradle to cradle and remanufacturing by Herkum01 · · Score: 2

      You are correct, I believe that computers be remanufacturable. However I don't believe that we can do this with today's technology coming from Intel, So I volunteer these open source plans for building a computer with reusable materials.

    3. Re:cradle to cradle and remanufacturing by drayzel · · Score: 1

      > Maybe HP realizes they can do this in other
      > businesses, why not computers?

      Or you could ask WHY do this to computers? HP is a company, other than sprucing up their corporate image they must have a financial insentive.

      I wonder if they found some nifty process that they have a patent on?

      ~Z

    4. Re:cradle to cradle and remanufacturing by MrEd · · Score: 2
      why not computers?


      Your analysis is bang on. Since PC manufacturers don't have to look at the computer once it leaves their factory (unless it's returned on warranty) there is no incentive to spend the extra $0.50 (or whatever) per unit to make it more easily recyclable. There's a lot their engineers could do to help re-use/recycling if management is forced to earmark some cash for it.

      --

      Wah!

  45. I'd like to see some government studies on this.. by grayhaired · · Score: 1

    I think it would be better to spend a couple hundred thousand dollars on this kind of problem than to study something painfully obscure. Old computers parts are loaded with heavy metals and are a water quality disaster waiting to happen. Recycling methods optimized for converting old mother boards and electronic parts would yield such a tangible human benefit.

    Kudos to California and HP for trying to find a way around this problem.

    Gray

  46. magic smoke disposal fee by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    It's all that damn blue smoke. It's a real bitch on the environment.

    I think they need a similar tax on devices that function primarily upon mirrors and vapor too!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  47. Re:HP Wants Manufacturers To Bear PC Disposal Cost by bcboy · · Score: 2

    It's not quite the same result. If the manufacturer is resposible, then consumers of computers bear the cost. In the current system, everyone bears the cost whether they're buying computer equipment or not.

  48. Re:Lifetime of PC components (reduce, reuse, recyc by ansible · · Score: 2

    Yup, and it's only going to get worse.

    It has been mentioned in magazines like EE Times that the smaller the process size (0.18 micron, etc.) the shorter-lived the component will be. Thermal cycling (heating and cooling), and electron migration (where the current erodes the metal interconnects) mean that stuff these days will only last a few years of continuous power-on time.

    I guess that's not so bad, it is just that some of the stuff made in the late 1980's and early 1990's will last just about forever after they make it out of the initial failure zone. Or at least the silicon will, the wire bonds may not, however...

  49. It should not be the manufacturer's responsibility by indiigo · · Score: 2

    It should be the consumer's. Consumers that are taxed for removal makes more sense, since they are the ones throwing the waste out. It would make people think twice about buying and then removing their consumeables. "Returning to the manufacturer" makes little sense, they are unlikely to use the x year-old-design, so now you are seeing shipping PC's back and forth between distribution points just to avoid waste, but causing waste in other ways...

    --
    fslg503-985-8686503-985-8686503-985-8686503-985-86 8650 3-985-fdsg8686503-985-8686503-985-8686503-9
  50. Make your kids bear the costs? by BSOD+from+above · · Score: 1

    not to get all more environmentally holier-than-thou or anything, but we can't even guess at "total cost" of many things.

    Chances are that our current legacy will out-live us by more than seven generations, like it once did.

    It is about time that "profits" get locked away until it can be proven that there does not need to be "clean-up".

    I guess if we can't save the planet, we might as well try to put it out of its misery.

    --
    Karma: Censored (mostly affected by decency laws)
  51. Here's a twist on an old idea... by Cali+Thalen · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Lets model this after the bottle/can recycling effort, with a little twist...

    Lets say...add on $100 to the cost of any PC, printer, and monitor (adjust the list as needed). When you return the item to a proper recycling location, you get the $100 back. (pre-made PCs only, home-built ones we'll let the lawyers deal with).

    But...to let the $$ influence things a bit, make it so that the $100 can be adjusted down if the PC is made with more recyclable products, based on certain parts or technologies.

    Maybe it would take more than $100, but...that seems to solve a couple of the inherent problems.

    --
    Chaos, panic, disorder...my work here is done.
  52. recycling PCBs and other components by andymac · · Score: 5, Informative
    From a seminar on lead-free solder from IPC:
    • 50-80% of "e-waste" is shipped to Asia (China, India, Pakistan)
    • The US has NOT signed the Basel Convention (1994) on hazardous waste (the convention signatories agree to not ship hazardous waste overseas/out of the country w/o some basic pre-processing of the waste)
    • The US electronics industry accounts for 2% of world's annual lead consuption. The majority of this is for lead in solder for printed Wire Boards (PWB) manufacturing and assembly. However this does not account for overseas manufacturing which is done for a huge # of US companies (i.e.: assembly offshore makes this 2% look low, but if you tracked the % tied to all US based/HQ'd firms, you'd probably see closer to 50% - this is just a SWAG onmy part here, no data).
    • The EU passed the Restriction of Use of Hazardous Materials directive (RoHS) which prohibits the use of lead from manufacturing & assembly of PWBs. This comes into effect in 2006. This means any electronics sold into EU on Jan 1 2006 must be 100% lead-solder free.
    • EU is also pushing Waste Electrical and Electronic (WEEE) directive. If passed, EU member countries can in fact put in place more restrictive laws.
    • HP has a publicly stated position on the issue of RoHS and WEEE that puts almost all of the onus on their supply chain partners to meet the directives.

    Why am I giving you all this information? Because this is not a simple recycling problem, period. This goes all the way back to the root: electronics manufacturing and assemblt of PWBs. The EU is flexing their muscles by pushing the RoHS and WEEE directives. HP has been planning for these two directives since they were scheduled for a vote in the EU (and RoHS has since been passed). The entire time their plan has been to push it down to the supply chain parnters. This has not changed in over a year, nor will it going forward. Why should it? With HP's purchasing power, they say "jump" and their suppliers say "how high, SIR!"

    --
    "Content's a bitch."
    1. Re:recycling PCBs and other components by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The US has NOT signed the Basel Convention (1994) on hazardous waste (the convention signatories agree to not ship hazardous waste overseas/out of the country w/o some basic pre-processing of the waste)

      I'm not sure of the letter of this Convention, but does it also stipulate that hazardous waste cannot be shipped *to* a country? Agreements such as this really confuse me; if a country (say India, Pakistan, or China) does not want the waste, they can pass their own laws preventing import. To some nations, the economic benefit may outweigh the environmental cost. If the EU doesn't like that policy, they are free not to trade with the US or other non-signatories. The EU is certainly big enough to exert its economic or political pressure on the US if it so chooses.

  53. Re:Recycling - Big Business by be-fan · · Score: 2

    Whoever said that was wrong? You seem to imply that it's morally wrong for a company to want to make money.
    >>>>>>>>>
    There are a lot of intellectual circles that believe that this is wrong. Not so much existing to make money but existing *only* to make money. Before spouting off, you should realize that not everyone shares the same (in my opinion bleak and simplistic) worldview.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  54. Re:Lifetime of PC components (reduce, reuse, recyc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suppose that's fine if all you do is read mail and post to /.

    But new machines make new things possible. Sure if you never do anything new, just use the same old machine. But really, by you're argument, we should just completely stop all progress in hardware and software development completely. Fire all programmers and all engineers. Just keep the factories alive pouring out the same crap for the next century. Bullshit.

    Computers should be meticulously recycled. They always should have been. Sure it costs more to do so, but that is the responsibility of creating the dangerous product in the first place.

  55. Good by WookieOnTheRun · · Score: 1

    If you knowingly create a problem then you should knowingly have to be a part of fixing the problem. For example, if I buy my car for transportation I need to pay the state based upon the emissions of the car (hence higher registration fees for trucks vs cars etc) and thats the price I pay. Kow that there are certain restraints put on the manufacturer of my vehicle that says they can't sell me a car that gets 2 miles to the gallon unless they and I pay hefty fees. The circumvention of this for the computer industry is saying- hey you can build whatever you want, even pack it in styrafoam (which they need to stop doing anyways) and if you are going to do that then you need to take on some of the responsability for the destruction you will knowingly create. I don't think the company needs to bear ALL of the burden, but the consumer and the company should bear it together.

  56. Re:More insteresting information: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How in the hell is this offtopic??

  57. Where's HanzoSan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With a dim-witted, left-wing comment?

  58. good for charities by geddes · · Score: 2, Insightful
    At my College, we have a room full of cycled out computers, PIIs and 15 inch CRTs that are very usable, but are just sitting there in a heap in the basement.

    We _try_ to donate them, but whenever we donate, we need the reciever to sign a contract holding _them_ liable for disposal costs, our legal department makes us do this, for good reasons, if the institutions we donate to dump the computers, and they are traced back to us, we have to pay huge fines.

    Whenever we mention an agreement like that most of these organizations back away and look for thier computers elsewhere. They want nothing to do with disposal fees. About once a year we pay a lot of money to have all our old computers disposed of.

    If the computer manufacturerers became liable for disposal costs, then we wouldn't have to worry about them, and we could donate the computers at will.

  59. I am SOOOOO sorry.... by GeneralEmergency · · Score: 1, Troll



    As a native Californian, I would like to formally apologize for the puddin' headed, Birkenstock wearing, blithering lunacy that takes place in our state legislature.

    As a former HP customer, well...I really don't have anything to apologize for, do I?

    --
    "A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
    GeneralEmergency
  60. Give me a fucking break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cast away pc's are poisoning thousands of people in 3rd world countries. Damn Americans(i am one) want their cake and eat it too, while destroying the lives of others in this world. This is the way our entire economy has worked for 50 years, and I AM FUCKING SICK OF IT. I would rather pay a bit more and know that the products i buy are not causing an environmental disaster(pc's, pesticide ridden vegetables, plastics, etc).

    It is time for the leader of Consumption in the world to take the lead on these issues. These initial costs will be reaped 1000 fold as the environment recovers.

    Why are environmental issues always used by conservative Republicans as a way of laughing at liberals? We should all be in this together to guide our lives towards more sustainable living.

  61. Re:flaw in the plan Between CA and Mass you have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    You have intriguing ideas and I'd like to subscribe to your newsletter.

  62. Easy PC Disposal... by silverhalide · · Score: 3, Funny

    Easy PC dispoal: www.ebay.com. Sheesh, did California forget they had that?

  63. Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just throw your [old] computer in the garbage... No chinese people will have to get sick and die as a result (unless you live there already I guess). I really don't throw out computers often, but when I do, I certainly never take them to be recycled. I had no idea there was any problem with just throwing them away until I first saw the BBC article about this months back. I guess I can imagine the CMOS battery and stuff is bad.. didn't really figure much else was. Look liked from what I read in the article, most of the trouble was burning wires, and using nasty toxins to strip gold and stuff... I don't think the seaguls are doing that.. so I'll probably continue to throw my old computers in the dumpster, like I do with my batteries. Where the hell am I supposed to take batteries anyhow? Sorry that I don't care about the Earth as much as many of you say you do I guess.

  64. Corporate sponsored politics! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Heh. First we start "selling" the names on our football and baseball stadiums for extra cash, perhaps soon "The Honorable Senator from Walt Disney" will become more than just a snide remark made about a particular senator from South Carolina, but a bona-fide title bought and paid-for with corporate money.

    Just imagine having to choose between Joe "Dell" Schmoe and John "HP" Doe on the ballot. Dude! Yer goin' to the White House!

  65. This law should NOT be passed. by Maul · · Score: 2

    While I agree that it is a good idea to make sure computer components should be properly recycled, this is not a law we need.

    1. Large computer manufacturers will always have a legal time full of slimeball lawyers who will find a loophole, or put something into an EULA that a computer user agrees to by opening the box to avoid the fees. Even if the manufacturer doesn't skip out on the fees, they can afford to pay them, but smaller manufacturers might not.

    2. This will hurt any small manufacturer, who doesn't have the resources to pay recycle fees. I know of dozens of small computer stores in the San Diego area that build systems, and will be hurt badly by such a law. It wouldn't surprise me that this is the real reason HP supports this.

    3. The responsibility of recycling should fall on the consumer. Consumers should be encouraged to re-use older components or to donate their old
    PCs rather than sending them back to the manufacturer to be scrapped.

    --

    "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

  66. I suspect competition elimination by IPFreely · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I'll bet they (HP) specifically want it to apply to Bob's garage.

    If all the small PC stores were required to put these requirements and costs in place, they would have a harder time competing with the big boys. This type of law would drive out a lot of the smaller competition. Keep the cost of business up and the barrier to entry high. Keep the smaller competition down and out.

    --
    There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
  67. Re:Recycling - Big Business by revscat · · Score: 2

    I loathe this mentality. EVERYTHING exists for the bottom line, big business, small business, non profits, governments, my wallet, everything. Businesses, large or small, are in business to make money. Whoever said that was wrong? You seem to imply that it's morally wrong for a company to want to make money.

    First off, you say this like it is a law of physics. This may be your interpretation of how the world works, but it most assuredly is not a hard fact. Second, under most of the time it is not wrong for a corporation or an individual to seek profit. But there are times when the right to make a profit infringes upon other rights, and the right to make a profit is outweighed by those conflicting interests.

    To take an extreme example: If BigBadCo decides to increase its profits through indentured servitude of its employees it has come into conflict with individual rights of freedom and will (and should) be prevented from acting in such a manner.

    Or to take a more modern example, take Enron. Enron lied to investors and regulators about its financial situation. There are laws which are set up to prevent this sort of thing, even though they increase the cost of doing business. However, these are costs that are required for a healthy marketplace.

    Just because something interferes with the ability of a corporation to make a profit does not make it ipso facto a bad thing. There is more to life than profit.

  68. externalities by akb · · Score: 2

    I love it how the commie talk comes out whenever anyone mentions that companies should take responsibility for the externalities they create. In this case, that externality is toxic waste in landfills from a large, high volume, virtually disposable product. We'll wind up paying for our computer waste later if we don't deal with it today.

    Hopefully the law will be crafted so as to provide incentive for companies to produce less waste, more easily recycled parts, and less toxic components.

    1. Re:externalities by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      How about the people that BUY the product pay for the disposal? And don't make the disposal a flat fee make it based on what the computer contains. This should allow the market to produce less toxic computers.

    2. Re:externalities by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      The 'externalities' are created by people's wants and desires. They want a new computer, they buy one.

      It isn't at all like scrap industrial waste, or process chemical disposal, or the like.

      My experience has been that 'more easily recycled parts' generally amounts to shoddy crap components. That buys totally into the hype about 'get a new computer ever year.' Which is bullshit.

  69. Re:HP Wants Manufacturers To Bear PC Disposal Cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I give kudos to HP for recognising that we can't just ship off all our old computers to China

    Actually, we can.

  70. Re:Lifetime of PC components (reduce, reuse, recyc by ejaw5 · · Score: 2

    I the problem is that many of the relatively new (and sometimes but not necessarilly younger) computer users don't appreciate the value of their computers. If you grew up back when computers were in excess of $4000 for a 386 with 130MB HDD you'd understand computers aren't as expendible as say..a toaster or microwave. Nobody needs a 2+Ghz CPU and GeForce 4 Ti to type documents, listen/rip music, and browse the web. A Pentium provides enough power for that.

    Personally, for everything I own, I'll try to FIX it first before jumping to buy a newer, shinier one. Among the people I know, I can't think of anyone else who does this (spoiled ingrates...). I'll admit I still have several 486 mobos my dad grabed from work a few years ago after being replaced. They still work, so I'll either keep them or sell 'em cheap. They're not going in the trash.

    --

    $cat /dev/random > Sig
  71. Re:Recycling - Big Business by andyring · · Score: 2

    If you would like to consider me bleak and simplistic, then I feel I must apologize for believing capitalism is a good thing. The same "intellectual circles" you site would likely find comfort in an environment where capitalism does not exist (read: communism, where it's all for the good of the people/state/etc.) and suddenly you have no incentive to succeed or improve yourself. Now that's what I call "bleak and simplistic."

  72. Enviro-whacko Leftist Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The idea that PC manufacturers should pay for the disposal of old computers is silly. What other industry pays for the disposal of products after users decide they don't want them? Some might do this as a business practice but none of them (that I know of) are required by law to dispose of older products.

    When you buy something it belongs to you. It is your personal property. And it it your job to dispose of it properly. Of course I wouldn't expect the leftist to understand this- most of them aren't too keen on the idea of personal property.

  73. false analogy. by twitter · · Score: 2
    you say:

    Now, you can only get your oil changed at one of the really big Oil Filter Changing companies. It's impossible to find anyone who'll change it who isn't part of a giant oil changing concern....Oh, wait. I'm talking bollocks. And White Box PC manufacturers can simply pay the disposal fee, something that's per-sale, like everyone else, like they did when ethernet boards became standard parts of modern computers, and hard drives became standard parts, etc, etc.

    First, your bad analogy might be true. What kind of non-big oil affiliated lubricant can anyone purchase? Who else but big oil can recycle used oil?

    Second, waste oil has buyers. Who's going to want to purchase your broken cell phone or PC?

    Third, PCs are only a small chunk of the waste stream, unlike automotive oil. We've been throwing out electronic gadgets with transistors, solder, phospohrs and all for a long time now without concern. PCs have only been around since 1980 or so. Waste oil from automobiles was a demostrated hazard which had no larger contributors, except maybe carcenoginic aditives to gasoline.

    What is really acomplished here and what's it going to cost? Are those costs worth the problem?

    First, show me evidence of a problem. While improper disposal of PC's in China is reprehensible, I'd like to see some direct evidence that PCs on their own are poluting groudwater or other resources elswhere.

    If you can demonstrate a problem, tell me the method and cost of proper disposal. I don't have a disposal problem myself because I have yet to throw away any PC I've ever owned. Yep, I've got the mother board for the first XT I bought in my closet and it would work if something better were not in it's case. Other computers I have are all 486 and above and are just as useful today as they were the day I bought them thanks to free software. Just the same, I'll take my things to the right place if you can show it's required.

    In the mean time, quit talking bollocks. I've taken care of my things and don't want to pay a tax or see small vendors put out of business because large compnaies like HP and M$ have been irresponsible.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:false analogy. by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Interesting
      First, your bad analogy might be true. What kind of non-big oil affiliated lubricant can anyone purchase? Who else but big oil can recycle used oil?
      Way to change the subject. The comparison was with oil changing places, which has always been done by anyone from small garages to huge chains like Valvoline. When the oil recycling fees came in, those small garages kept on going. To continue the comparison, your complaint about my analogy is akin to complaining that small, white box, PC manufacturers can't pay a recycling fee because they don't manufacture the Intel CPUs and VIA chipsets, unlike, er, HP.

      Second, waste oil has buyers. Who's going to want to purchase your broken cell phone or PC?
      Other than suggesting that oil recycling taxes are unnecessary, what's your point?

      Third, PCs are only a small chunk of the waste stream, unlike automotive oil. We've been throwing out electronic gadgets with transistors, solder, phospohrs and all for a long time now without concern. PCs have only been around since 1980 or so. Waste oil from automobiles was a demostrated hazard which had no larger contributors, except maybe carcenoginic aditives to gasoline.
      That's great. The fee shouldn't end up being particularly high then.
      First, show me evidence of a problem. While improper disposal of PC's in China is reprehensible, I'd like to see some direct evidence that PCs on their own are poluting groudwater or other resources elswhere.
      Well, to begin with, we've been throwing out electronic gadgets with transisters, phosphors, and all, for a long time now without considering the consequences. This rubbish, as you correctly state above, is not something anyone wants - it's hard to recycle, unlike, say, waste oil. The issue has gotten bad enough that we're trying to dump the stuff on countries like, er, China. This may help us in the short term, preventing our groundwater, etc, from being polluted, but...
      Yep, I've got the mother board for the first XT I bought in my closet and it would work if something better were not in it's case. Other computers I have are all 486 and above and are just as useful today as they were the day I bought them thanks to free software. Just the same, I'll take my things to the right place if you can show it's required.
      Now, that's real nice of you. You know something? I'm the same way. I have a Dragon 32 floating around somewhere, and my original 386DX25 motherboard is still in the closet. My home network is a hodgebodge of old Pentia and laptops, Sun workstations, and one, relatively modern, VIA C3 based machine. Of course, I run Linux and OpenBSD. People like us will benefit from these taxes, we will not be forced to subsidize the "upgrade every year" mob as we do at present through our income and (conventional, non computer related) sales taxes. That means, over all, we'll pay a little less. Those who buy a computer every year will find themselves paying a little more than they did previously, and that'll be good too, because what they pay will more fairly represent the costs that PC introduces.
      In the mean time, quit talking bollocks. I've taken care of my things and don't want to pay a tax or see small vendors put out of business because large compnaies like HP and M$ have been irresponsible.
      You've shown no evidence that small vendors will be put out of business by a tax like this. What evidence do you have that their slice of the market will suddenly reduce? That their prices will disproportionately rise above those of larger vendors? Last I looked, the oil recycling fee charged by my local garage was the same as that by Valvoline.

      And, far from paying more taxes under this system, you, as a consciencuous PC user, will pay less - well, insofar as anyone pays less taxes. Your local and state governments will not be overly burdened by the costs of getting rid of everyone else's unwanted PC hardware - that burden will be paid for.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    2. Re:false analogy. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      People like us will benefit from these taxes, we will not be forced to subsidize the "upgrade every year" mob as we do at present through our income and (conventional, non computer related) sales taxes.

      No.

      Wrong.

      In fact, people like us will lose bigtime from these taxes and the streamlined 'computer disposal' aparatus that will be funded by them. "Got an old PC? Here, throw it on the government truck and we'll haul it off for storage and eventual(?) disposal. We'll store it in this facility with a chain link fence.

      The regulatory apparatus will make it difficult or impossible to sell gear as a private individual. Don't be antisocial and strew your waste around, throw it on the government truck! We won't be able to salvage decent used CD-ROM drives from people's $5 computers at garage sales.

    3. Re:false analogy. by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      Of course, the government, in a fit of environmental pique, is going to make it illegal to sell computing equipment second hand, therefore forcing it to be discarded instead of reused.

      Sure they are. You better watch out. I bet they'll start this evil policy by taxing tin foil hats...

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  74. So what's your point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    """
    Laws like this do nothing but raise costs for consumers.
    """

    First of all, "Oh, those poor consumers -- how they suffer so. They have to make their daily commutes in big 'ol SUVs on crowded roads, eating McDonalds' Egg McMuffins and drinking Coca-Cola for breakfast. It's just so tragic... But it doesn't have to be this way. For just $4000 per month, you can sponsor an American consumer..."

    """
    Does anyone in their right mind think HP, etc., will simply eat the cost of this? No.
    """

    Of course they won't; they'll pass the cost on to the consumers !up-front! such that the consumers won't have to *THINK* (which they never do anyway) about how to properly dispose of the formerly-pretty-but-now-50-lb-paperweight 21" dino-tron monitor.

    Get real -- I just got done paying $10 for the honor of donating my old monitor to a kids' program that tries to safely recycle these nasty buggers (so having the cost passed on to me is hardly new). It took me three hours to find the program and another couple of hours and emails to find where I could drop the monitor off, plus the annoyance of moving a rather large monitor in a rather small car across town.

    Had I been in a smaller town, the monitor would have probably gone into the landfill because -- like most Americans (as demonstrated in this post) -- I'm not going to be *that* bothered with proper disposal of dangerous substances.

    I think it would be great if CRT (etc) manufacturers tacked on $15 to the cost of all of their monitors and put a sticker on each one saying "For local disposal options, call 1-800-Junk-This" and then they either hook you up with a local disposal program (which already exists so they don't/shouldn't need to fund it) or they send a carrier to pick it up and move it to a local disposal program somewhere. Heck, all the manufacturers could even use the same 1-800 number. And when the local volunteer infrastructure gets overwhelmed by the sheer volume of stuff to recycle, kick the price up to $35 per nasty thing and start paying people to keep us clean -- by then, the (afaik) relatively nice LCD panels should be the primary market, reducing the CRTs to an odd niche market and reducing the need for such infrastructure. Hope hope.

    The thing is that if you're asking people to think about the environment, you're asking for the wrong thing. Hence, this isn't asking people to think, its asking people to throw money (as part of a base cost) and then make a phone call when they're ready to stop playing.

  75. Not Sure... by Sabalon · · Score: 2

    My dad has two dells, my sisters both have dells, my aunt has a gateway and a IBM Thinkpad, neighboor has a HP which replaced a Packard Bell, just worked on a friend of my mom's HP the other night. Other neighboor just bought an HP, and another neighboor has an HP. Only neighboor I know who has a white-box special also recently bought an HP.

    I dunno - I know a lot of the /. crowd probably have the custom jobs, but with one exception, everyone I know who has a machine whose type I know is a namebrand.

    Nothing scientific here...just one experience.

  76. The problem is heavy metals and other ickys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    used in the guts of your computer. They really arn't safe in a land fill, the same with cell phones and other electronic devices, batteries, etc. These sorts of things which arn't "inert" and actually are problematic for land-fills should all have paid-up recycling so that there isn't an insentive for the general public to "dump" the used stuff rather than delivering it to the appropriate containment facility.
    I'm not so sure about "recycling" as much as making sure the stuff doesn't get into landfills where it can make its way into ground water, etc.

    Tires are problematic beacuse they are a fire hazard, but 99% of the other stuff in the household arn't anywhere near as bad as computers.

  77. Re:flaw in the plan Between CA and Mass you have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.lp.org/

  78. administrative costs? Nice link! by twitter · · Score: 2
    In Germany...manufacturers are responsible ...for the cost of recycling waste ...[and] assuring that it is actually done...Most companies, especially small ones, comply by joining the Grüne Punkt [commercialangles.com] (Green Dot) program, which takes care of the waste for the company. It doesn't really create a barrier to entry, because the fees are based on weight of packaging material and don't cost a small company any more than a big one.

    So how small an operation can afford Green Dot fees? The site you pointed at shows some marked disadvantages for those small companies:

    The costs of the licence depend on the type of packaging and its weight. As a rule of thumb the cost of the licence is about £1 per Kg of packaging. The definition of packaging is wide and includes CD cases, straw and carrier bags for example. Small companies with low sales in Germany are required to pay their fees in advance whereas larger companies may make quarterly sales statements. At the end of the year all licencees must submit an audit report to show they have complied with the regulations.

    So smaller companies must pay larger shipping costs and do so up front, where larger companies simply put a few spare file clerks on the case. Hmmmm. Your site also talks about how the EU has cited this as anti-competitive and abusive as well as wasteful. Thanks for the link, it's good to see what the old world looks like so we can appreciate how good things are here before we ruin them.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  79. Its heavy metals and other toxics...not soda cans! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and Pepsi shoudl pay to get rid of my Mountain Dew cans

    Aluminum cans arn't toxic, yes they arn't bio-degradable and happen to be recyclable so it makes sense to re-use the material rather than filling up landfills. But and it makes sense to recycle them rather than taking up landfill space -- but this isn't the issue!

    The problem is that computers have very toxic stuff in them. Stuff that shoudn't go into landfills.

  80. Re:Recycling - Big Business by be-fan · · Score: 2

    There you go again, reducing things to a simple conflict between pure capitalism and pure communism, and pigeon-holing circles of thought into one group or another. Perhaps the biggest weakness of the prevailing thought pattern in the US is it's tendency to simplify all concepts to the point of absurdity. There is not a single school of that that believes unadultered capitalism is a bad thing. There is a wide range of people that don't believe in pure capitalism, and their ideals take the form of everything from slightly tempered capitalism to pure communism. The course of history indicates that those near the middle are most nearly right. Communism largely failed the world over, while pure capitalism failed as well - even in the United States. The current US is most nearly socialist, according to traditional (rather than modern) definitions of the word.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  81. Benifits to the poor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope if something along these lines is passed that they will figure out some way to utilize these aging PCs to benifit the poor. There are still quite a few people in the US without access, it would be great if we could work out something to scrap together the higher end parts and provide them with something resembling connectivity.

    We can build and fly huge birds of metal and plastic anywhere on the earth, figuring out how to do something like this shouldnt be kicking out butts.

    But it is. Well?

  82. EVERYTHING by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

    All goods should pay for their disposal UP FRONT. Like PC disposal charges, this would internalize the disposal cost. Why is the state (when in the US it does so little of real value) required to offer disposal services? Why not require manufacturers/purchasers pay the cost directly?

    Something like that would go ALONG way in curbing consumer culture - can you imagine, actually being RESPONSIBLE (to a degree) for the whole environmental cost of consumerism?

    if we could only internalize the environmental cost of manufacture of items into their costs... that would be great... oh, and the cost to REHABILITATE the planet because of all the needless pollution... terrific.

  83. Do AOL disks count as e-waste? by aquarian · · Score: 2

    At least PCs serve a useful purpose before they're scrapped, helping to conserve other resources. AOL disks are shameless pollution from the get-go.

  84. Re:flaw in the plan Between CA and Mass you have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you make it completely obvious that you know very little, or nothing at all, about the state of New Hampshire. Allow me to enlighten you. The state motto is "Live Free or Die". This should explain a lot of things. They're the only state that I know of with no sales tax, no state income tax, and no seat belt or helmet laws after the age of 18. They firmly believe in a small government, with minimal laws. If I'm not mistaken, that's conservative, not liberal. Mass on the other hand is probably the most liberal state other than California.

  85. connect the dots by twitter · · Score: 2
    Why not design computers to be remanufacturable?

    Why not indeed? Why is it that PC cases have gone from PC to AT to ATX and beyond? The old forms worked and still work. I've got a AMD k6/2 450 running happily in an XT case with a 150 watt power supply. Worse, why is it that the cases have been tossed out with the guts even when there has been no change in form factor? Even worse than that, why is it that perfectly useful components get thrown away because of software "upgrades"? Hmmmm. Might it be because certian companies are discouraging modularization and reuse of their components, the Winmodem being the most glaring example? How about printers and scanners that also take "drivers" despite having enought computing power to have common interfaces like HP's printer command language, post script, or SCSI? Answer these questions and you will know why we have more dead PCs than living people.

    Now, the next question is if PC waste is significanly greater and more damaging than other consumer electronic wastes. Are PCs worse than credenza stereos, TVs, and all the other junk thrown out combined? How is my old 9600 baud modem any worse than my old jam box? What problem will recycling fees really solve?

    Put the two questions together and you might see the purpose of this as limitation of entry to PC manufacturing. Dell was started in a dorm room, you don't think they want any new entrants do you?

    Combine this with media consolidation, increased government censorship and information monitoring, and you might think a confluence of interests lies in limiting the number of PC makers so that DRM like Paladium can be implimented. Can't have indepenent makers around offering "insecure" computers can we? And so it was uttered in private, and so it was done against the public good, without public input, and certianly not reseombling anything really American. A governement for the people, by the people and of the people? Nah, HP did it, that must be good enough for you and me.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  86. In Soviet Russia by drayzel · · Score: 1

    You can buy PC's only from government monopolies...

    Hey wait a sec! Won't shifting the burden to PC makers weed out the small fries, and even many medium sized companies? Leaving only the large companies that already have the infrastructure in place for such a program? Dang. No wonder HP is backing the bill. Why fight clones if you can get the government to do it in of the name of the enviroment?

    I think most if not all mega corporation would build PC's out of ivory and dolphin skin if the materials where cheap enough and public opinion didn't hurt sales.

    ~Z

  87. mercury news? by Dugh+Daren · · Score: 1

    does anyone find it strange that the *mercury* news is carrying articles about disposing objects that contain... mercury?

  88. Re:It should not be the manufacturer's responsibil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the next thing you will see are old PC cases laying around in drainage ditches, dirt road sholders etc.

  89. Re:HP Wants Manufacturers To Bear PC Disposal Cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Kudos" is a word that should be stricken from the English language! Makes me want to puke!

  90. TV disposal costs by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Has anyone considered what will happen in the next few years as the FCC mandates all TV broadcasting in the major markets be in digital format? Has California considered how it will deal with a glut of old analog TV sets headed for the trash dump? I suppose they could be sold on EBay to the rest of the country until the digital mandate becomes 100%. Ironically, when we stimulate the economy with products consumers want to buy, like computers in the recent decade, we also stimulate trash. So maybe our disposal rates will be a lagged measure of our economy.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  91. Huh??? by pavera · · Score: 2

    In what other industry is the manufacturer responsible for disposal of the things it makes???
    Cars?? No... tires?? no... car batteries?? no... I can't think of a single one, and all of the above there have hazardous materials in them... why is the pc industry being made to do this??? Obviously its just a push by hp to get all of the small computer makers out of the market, because hp/dell can handle having to pay a charge to recycle computers, hell they could open their own recycling plants, but all the little white box makers will be forced out of business because we don't have the capital or cash flow to handle this type of overhead.

  92. And Selfish-nutball Libertarian Crap by indros13 · · Score: 1
    When you buy someone, the cost of disposal or recycling should be factored into it, so that "your personal property" doesn't fsck up everyone else's environment when you are done with it. This law is necessary to remedy the disgusting amount of waste generated at every level of our economy--it just needs to ensure that the person who buys it pays the price.


    Don't like socialism? Then pay for your own damn messes by paying what the product actually costs to make (and dispose of).

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  93. Re:administrative costs? Nice link! by Odds · · Score: 1

    Where are you getting this from? The EU stated that DSD (owner of the green dot program) has too large an advantage due to its large market share - a monopoly type problem, not "abusive" or "wasteful". Sure, the link says that the practice is overly bureaucratic, but that's not the same as wasteful - in fact, it's reducing solid waste.

    And your comment about the "old world" is the wrongheaded. If anything, the USA represents the "old world" way of doing things. The EU is years ahead of North America in terms of environmental programs. (I say this as a Canadian, just as guilty as any American - I'm not trying to start a nationality flamewar here.) The idea that all things European are "old world" is just inflammatory.

    - David

  94. Everyone on ./ Builds Their Own by syntap · · Score: 1

    Who will recycle ours? The Computer Show people?

  95. Land of 10,000 lakes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This even impacts the land of a Thousand Lakes (Minnesota)

    You underestimate us. Minnesota is the "Land of 10,000 Lakes" (actually 11,842).

  96. yeah right by plasm4 · · Score: 0

    Supporting a measure that requires PC makers to pay for the cost of disposal? More like supporting a measure that requires PC buyers to pay for the cost of disposal. NVidia Gforce4 $400 100 GB HD $150 DVD Burner $300 21in Flat Screen $1000 Disposal Fee $200

  97. THE cost by I+am+Jack's+username · · Score: 1
    > Can't have the lifetime costs built into everything - that would make just about everything price-prohibitive. - EatHam

    It would make unsustainable consumption prohibitive - that's the idea! While you might think it's a great idea to sacrifice our only habitat for short term finanacial gain, the people who'd like to leave something for future humans disagree.

    "The cost of a thing is the amount of what I call life which is required to be exchanged for it, immediately or in the long run." - Henry David Thoreau

    True cost pricing, Green taxes.

    "Only after the last tree has been cut down; only after the last fish has been caught; only after the last river has been poisoned; only then will you realize that money cannot be eaten." - Cree Indian proverb
  98. HP Wants Manufacturers To Bear PC Disposal Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    which really means the consumer will be hit with the costs. which really means consumers will be hit with double the cost if they dispose their pc the environmentally friendly way already.

  99. Re:Lifetime of PC components (reduce, reuse, recyc by orkysoft · · Score: 1

    Yeah. When my TNT2 video card's fan began making a really annoying noise, I replaced it, instead of upgrading the video card. It was much cheaper, and I didn't need more 3D power anyway.

    --

    I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
  100. Allow me to shoot that down. by Wise+Dragon · · Score: 2

    Throw away?

    HP will send you upon reqest, some postage-paid mailers to return your used ink cartridges for recycling.

    Just click here.

    I wasn't joking. HP is an environmentally friendly, socially responsible company, and you should buy stuff from us for that reason. Well that and we make good stuff.

    And as for cheap, well have you tried buying a new ink cartridge lately? Ouch! (But it is better quality than the refills.)

  101. some examples by twitter · · Score: 2
    You've shown no evidence that small vendors will be put out of business by a tax like this. What evidence do you have that their slice of the market will suddenly reduce? That their prices will disproportionately rise above those of larger vendors?

    It's a matter of scale. Big companies can absorb the costs of regulations better than small ones can. Extreem examples of this are aircraft, automobile and motorcycle manufacture. Regulation is the prime reason the US has three automakers, poor civilian aviation and one motorcycle maker. While there are some advantages to scale and size in those industries, can you tell me why there's only one US manufacturer of motorbikes? PCs don't pose the threat to health and public safety the way motorized transportation does and this spurious "waste" issue is the only thing HP etc can fix on to get rid of small PC makers.

    Now because I have posed some real harm this can do, I throw the burden of proff onto you and those who would change things. Show me studies where electronic goods have managed polute groundwater. Heck, I'd be satisfied if you could simply point to widespread evidence of sanitary landfill failure in general. If what I say is true, and small PC makers get squashed, I'm sure that I'll pay more for my next PC when I can't find the next upstart Dell dude in his dorm room. I don't want to trade that for some kind of silly PC only law that fails to stop any real harm by blocking all the larger stream of poison to the landfill from all other consumer electronic devices. In other words prove it's a problem and prove that proposed fees will fix the problem. If you can't I'm not going for it.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:some examples by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      One motorcycle manufacturer? Hardly. I assume you mean that outfit with the factory in York, PA? You forget Polaris (I think they're US), the now defunct EH (who went down the poop chute not due to US regulations, but mismanagement) and Indian. That also ignores the factories in the US for both Kawasaki and Honda. Are they foreign or domestic? At one point in time, the Honda Gold Wing (built in Marysville, OH) had a higher domestic part content than the Harley Davidson FLH. But there is an entity that is of particular interest to this discussion: Harley Clone builders. They buy off the shelf (S&S) engines and trannies, someone else's frame, etc. Very analogous to the clone PC makers.

      But, you are right, Honda US, Kawasaki US, Polaris, etc, etc, etc. together don't equal the production of HD in any given year. (BTW, I think Kawasaki does count as a US manufacturer. They have a plant in Nebraska, built originally for the K1000 police bike. They needed a US plant to be allowed to bid on contracts for police departments. I think they also build a version of the KLR 650 for military use, but I'm not certain about that one.)

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    2. Re:some examples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, Polaris is a brand of Bombardier, which is a Canadian company.

      peace

    3. Re:some examples by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      Now because I have posed some real harm this can do...
      No, you didn't. You compared the white box computer industry to the motorcycle industry, and a small tax on computers to the enormous costs of building and maintaining plants to build motorbikes. You can put together a PC in an office or in a shed. Motorbikes, and other custom built hardware, requires rather more than that.

      And, ironically, you're talking complete crap. The motorbike industry is pretty much saturated, but there's a healthy custom car industry, a near equivalent to white box PC manufacturers, except - unlike the custom car industry - there's a healthy demand for white box PCs.

      My comparison was with Oil Change Filter replacement groups. There are huge chains, there's an environmental issue which has resulted in a "disposal fee" whose nature appears to be identical to what HP are proposing. And independents are doing very well, thank you. Randomly making comparisons is silly unless there's at least an economic simularity between the two situations - environmental taxes do not explain the disappearance of an entirely US owned motorcycle industry, but the one industry I can think of where an environment tax is charged, where big chains, small independents, and even individuals striking out on their own, is common, is doing very healthily. What economies of scale are there in an environmental disposal fee? Do you think HP will somehow be able to negotiate a lower rate with the government and government-chartered entities tasked with implementing this?

      Meanwhile, YOU have already pointed out that we've reached a point we can't keep chucking this stuff on landfills. YOU raised the China example. YOU pointed out that we've reached a point where we have to ship this crap overseas. And you're contradicting your suggestion that there's no real harm by suggesting that the terrible consequences of unrestrained electronics disposal are part of a much wider net.

      Yes, we need to make sure radios and mobile phones and TVs and VCRs and AOL disks and DVDs and what have you are included in these kinds of clean-ups too. But saying we shouldn't, because they're not, is the worst kind of NIMBY hypocracy.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  102. Why just PCs? by El · · Score: 2

    Wouldn't be more fair to require EVERY manufacturer or importer to set aside enough money to cover the projected disposal costs? Then our landfills would be free, and fewer people would dump their garbage in the woods...

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  103. More likely China's water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oh wait that has already happend.

  104. Bottled water by tlambert · · Score: 2

    The main reason you need bottled water is the MTBE being added to gasoline. Unless you live in one of the few chip manufacturing areas, you're uninvolved.

    -- Terry

  105. Conspiracy Theory! by fsck! · · Score: 1

    Okay, let me start out by saying that I am a bleeding-heart environmentalist (and someone who has owned dozens of computers). This is great news, and I'm very glad to hear that someone with so much weight to throw around is behind it.

    However! Let's think about why this is in HP's stockholders' best interest. Is it possible that HP likes this plan because it will increase someone's cost of doing business? Big guys like HP can surely handle the price tag for this greenwashing, but if you're a small-time Mom & Pop computer store, this could be very bad news.

    Anybody have any other guesses at HP's motivation?

  106. If you've read the article or watched the news... by tlambert · · Score: 2

    If you've read the article or watched the news, you'll know that they are talking about collecting the fee up front.

    That way, when it comes time to recycle the Compaq Persario's, you spin off the Presario division into a seperate company, and then it can declare bankruptcy, leaving the consumer holding the bag, as they already are today.

    The only way I'd trust something like this is if the money went into an escrow account. Even then, you're not assured ("Gee, we underestimated the disposal costs...").

    It's simply not going to work, unless you pay up front, and the people you pay are *guaranteed* to still be around when you go to get rid of the machine, and they are *required* to take it, without charging you more money.

    Not going to happen. It's just another boondoggle.

    -- Terry

  107. Design it disposable.... and pay for that design! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe some incentive?

  108. In a way... by drf5n · · Score: 1
    In a way it eliminates competition, but it also can encourage the specialization of the smaller companies. WalMart, K-Mart, etc. might be more likely to leave the business to the locals or the big online guys if they have to manage the return/disposal program.

    My uncle favored legislation like this for his paint manufacturing company. Requiring the sellers of paint to take the unused paint back makes it uneconomic for a business like Sears who's main business is not paint.

    Manufacturers which actually produce their own product have an advantage in disposal. They have more of an ability to reuse/recycle the product than middlemen for whom the business is a sideline. Office Depot doesn't want to take up twice their warehouse space with used computers, but CompUSA or Bob's Computer Garage might be able to do something useful with them.

  109. Of course they do, it's in their interest by blackwizard · · Score: 2
    As I have mentioned previously on this site, HP has the technology to do most of their own PC recycling. The only thing they can't recycle is the CRT. People pay them big money to get rid of their old equipment, then they turn around and sell the raw materials, and anything else that is reusable.

    So it's no wonder that HP wants this to pass. Someone realized that they can actually *profit* from this. My guess is the swift change in HP's position was a result of some people being uninformed after the Compaq merger.

    IMHO, more companies need to learn how to deal with their own waste rather than shipping it to Asia on a barge. HP is just ahead of the game.

  110. I suspect not by dsavitsk · · Score: 1
    If all the small PC stores were required to put these requirements and costs in place, they would have a harder time competing with the big boys. This type of law would drive out a lot of the smaller competition. Keep the cost of business up and the barrier to entry high. Keep the smaller competition down and out.

    Or, more likely, it would create a secondary market for recycling, and all of the small guys could buy the service from one of a few large recyclers. Chances are that the large manufacturers would do this too as it would likely be inefficient for each computer maker to get in to the secondary business of recycling.

    Thus, the advantages and disadvantages of being large would probably stay about the same.

    1. Re:I suspect not by IPFreely · · Score: 2

      And as we are all aware, "Volume discounts" and exclusionary contracts would never enter the picture. It would be completely fair to the small makers.

      --
      There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
    2. Re:I suspect not by dsavitsk · · Score: 1
      "Volume discounts" and exclusionary contracts would never enter the picture. It would be completely fair to the small makers.

      Well, of course they would, but how is that different from the current difficulties of being a small manufacturer? The system is geared to supporting larger companies, but there is nothing particular about this recycling function that makes it any more troubling.

  111. And your solution is....??? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Correct! Do nothing. Ignore the costs that pollution have in the economy (eventually somebody has to clean the mess) and lets ignore the alarmist zealots that dare to suggest that dumping chemicals and plastics in landfills may not be such a brilliant idea.What a bunch of idiots...

    You seem too worried about consumer rights but very unconcerned about consumer moral obligations (that in some instances should be reflected in enforceable laws).

    And you also forget that consumers are also tax payers. Your pitiful attempt at creating sympathy for poor consumers blissfully ignores that they will have to foot the bill of the Mother of all Cleanups. How charming of you.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  112. There are inherent costs to do bussines. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    One of them should be to help clean out the mess your commercial activity creates, if you enter a market in which big businesses are already established then you are in trouble, if you enter a niche market then you will be OK, what we can't do is continue ignoring the costs of our habits.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  113. I should not do this... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... but I will respond to you, AC.

    I am a fscking rabid capitalist, lover of personal property.

    Get that in your anonymous cowardly brain.

    But property does not exist in a vacuum, and whatever Maggie Thatcher told you, there is such a thing as society. Do not believe me? He, give me your address, I need somewhere to dump my rubish.

    Property without assuming responsibility for that property is a nice construct of people like you (i.e. Anonymous Cowards) that has no place in the lifes of real people.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  114. Damn right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Small cornershop PC whitebox assemblers should have a poster stataing "License to spoil".

    Nobody should bear the responsibility of paying for cleaning up the mess (or avoiding it in the first place). We are all soooo poor, and those littel companies. And think of the children.

  115. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

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    your body be hardwired to an analog-to-digital converter, which is then
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    LOGO for the Dead is available for 10 percent of your estate
    from NecroSoft inc., 6502 Charnelhouse Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44101.
    -- '80 Microcomputing

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...