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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday July 14 2019, @07:52AM   Printer-friendly
from the what-about-bitcoin dept.

The Shift Project has released a report pointing the finger at online video as a significant, and growing, cause of greenhouse gas emissions.

From New Scientist:

The transmission and viewing of online videos generates 300 million tonnes of carbon dioxide a year, or nearly 1 per cent of global emissions. On-demand video services such as Netflix account for a third of this, with online pornographic videos generating another third.

[...] The authors call for measures to limit the emissions from online videos, such as preventing them from autoplaying and not transmitting videos in high definition when it is unnecessary. For instance, some devices can now display higher resolutions than people can perceive. The report says regulation will be necessary.

No word on the carbon footprints of HTTPS, JavaScript, or advertising.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by looorg on Sunday July 14 2019, @08:54AM (1 child)

    by looorg (578) on Sunday July 14 2019, @08:54AM (#866834)

    One would indeed thing that HTTPS; Javascripts, just generally bloating webcode of sorts and advertisements are just completely dwarfed by streaming (audio, video or both) when it comes to size. Just watching more then a minute or two probably turns the code output to an insignificant number.

    One could guess that they could do more caching then they already do. After all it already happens on at least a few levels. We are not all watching youtube clips from that one server somewhere in serverfarm but it has been distributed out based on some criteria -- probably assumed views or number of views while other clips watched by very few people don't get cached at all. So with that in mind it might be somewhat dicey to talk about a carbon footprint of streaming since it will come from so many different sources and as noted will most likely already have been cached at least once to a location closer to you then the original. ISP:s could probably save a fair bandwidth to by doing it on their end, if they are just large enough and know their customer base somewhat they might know what to put in the cache or not on any given day.

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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 14 2019, @03:04PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 14 2019, @03:04PM (#866906)

    Compare the size of i.reddit.com with the current reddit.com to see how much bloat there is. Then multiply the difference by number of pageviews and watts used per MB bandwidth. I get 3 TWh per year of wasted (not total, just wasted on bloat) electricity for that site alone, more than used by 96 countries.