Hi! Happy nearly-end of summer to all who celebrate. This is the issue where I clear out my interesting-to-me-and-maybe-to-you stuff collected from other newsletters, old school RSS feeds, and midnight doomscrolling.
Climate / internet stuff first, “Other” second. And conferences in the middle.
If you like this sort of thing, please consider upgrading your subscription. The more who do, the more incentive I have to do this sort of thing (sad, I know).
Google’s carbon emissions surge nearly 50% due to AI energy demand
Emissions up 50% compared to 2019. Figures are taken from Google’s 2024 environmental report.
Electricity demand is forecast to grow as much as 20% by 2030, with AI data centers alone expected to add about 323 terawatt hours of electricity demand in the U.S.
According to Google, it’ll be worth it:
AI holds immense promise to drive climate action. In fact, AI has the potential to help mitigate 5–10% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2030
- Google Environmental report, introduction
Their source for the 5-10% figure is the Boston Consulting Group rather than an academic study.
I asked Notebook LLM to summarize the report’s findings on AI:
For laughs, I asked it to assess the quality of the sources:
So what are we using AI for?
What do people really ask chatbots? It’s a lot of sex and homework. (WaPo)
Mainstream coverage of internet emissions pt xxiv
Excess memes and ‘reply all’ emails are bad for climate, researcher warns (The Guardian)
Cites the usual “data centers = 6% electricity” figures, but this article is mostly about data waste or “dark data” : “68% of data used by companies is never used again”.
Good points here about the money and time wasted by consumers from backing up everything unnecessarily.
These days, I’m more interested in the mental cost of having a humongous uncurated personal data cloud. I know that somewhere I have thousands of unsorted photos; my dropbox is a shitshow; my gmail is almost out of storage, etc. I can’t bring myself to declutter because I don’t know where to start. I just checked and the internet says this is bad for my health.
[Article idea: digital de-cluttering for your mental health (and some climate gains too probably)]
Events
Copied from the ClimateActionTech newsletter.
BBC Climate Creatives: October 2nd, Online
Other things I clicked this month
Public Work image search
“The Search Engine for public domain works”. I think I’m in love? Part of Cosmos.so - a pinterest alternative - “where ideas are sacred”.
Life anti-check list
87% :(
Gamergate at 10 (Links I would gchat you…)
Gamergate was the point where I started getting super-depressed about the probability that the internet will do far more harm than good. Thankfully, this retrospective has a section titled “Did anything get better as a result of Gamergate?” which made me feel a little happier. Quotes:
Both Twitter and Reddit made substantive changes to their content and harassment policies in the wake of Gamergate.
…but then Elon broke the moderation team at twitter.
…there are far more women and non-binary people working in gaming today than there were 10 years ago, according to the International Game Developers Association. Admittedly, “far more” is still not “a lot”.
The games researcher Adam Jerrett has argued, for instance, that video games grew more “values-conscious” in the wake of Gamergate.
DEI teams come standard at most large U.S. and Canadian development companies.
Less tolerance within the industry for the type of rhetoric that defined Gamergate 10 years ago.
But:
That’s inside the video game industry, though. Outside, the legacy of Gamergate looks a lot more durable. And next week, I’m talking to Elle Reeve about one of the scariest aspects of that legacy: the rise of the internet-incubated alt-right and the larger white nationalist movement.
Follow Caitlin’s newsletter for more fun internet topics.
Personal update
I’m back from a long family vacation and returning to freelance work + job hunting. If you know of anywhere that needs a climate-adjacent UX designer / strategist, please let me know.
ttfn,
James