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Submission + - Plastic Recycling a 'Failed Concept,' Study Says (cbsnews.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Plastic recycling rates are declining even as production shoots up, according to a Greenpeace USA report out Monday that blasted industry claims of creating an efficient, circular economy as "fiction." Titled "Circular Claims Fall Flat Again," the study found that of 51 million tons of plastic waste generated by U.S. households in 2021, only 2.4 million tons were recycled, or around five percent. After peaking in 2014 at 10 percent, the trend has been decreasing, especially since China stopped accepting the West's plastic waste in 2018.

According to Greenpeace USA's survey, only two types of plastic are widely accepted at the nation's 375 material recovery facilities. The first is polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is commonly used in water and soda bottles; and the second is high density polyethylene (HDPE), seen in milk jugs, shampoo bottles and cleaning product containers. These are numbered "1" and "2" according to a standardized system in which there are seven plastic types. But being recyclable in theory doesn't mean products are being recycled in practice.

The report found that PET and HDPE products had actual reprocessing rates of 20.9 percent and 10.3 percent, respectively — both down slightly from Greenpeace USA's last survey in 2020. Plastic types "3" through "7" — including children's toys, plastic bags, produce wrappings, yogurt and margarine tubs, coffee cups and to-go food containers — were reprocessed at rates of less than five percent. Despite often carrying the recycling symbol on their labels, products that use plastic types "3" through "7" fail to meet the Federal Trade Commission classification of recyclable. This is because recycling facilities for these types aren't available to a "substantial majority" of the population, defined as 60 percent, and because the collected products are not being used in the manufacturing or assembly of new items.

Submission + - ISC2 proposes to take away membership oversight (portswigger.net)

mencik writes: The International Information Systems Security Certification Consortium (ISC2) is the body that issues the CISSP among other certifications to people in the Information Security business. The Board has proposed changes to the by-laws which remove the ability of the membership to elect new members to the Board, and restricts their ability to provide any meaningful oversight. "The Daily Swig" reports on the group's defense of these undemocratic proposals.

Another group is campaigning to get members to vote "no" on the adoption of these changes, the vote for which opened on 10/19/22. They are also proposing their changes which would increase transparency, and those can be found at http://jsweb.net/isc2. Only ISC2 members can vote.

Submission + - First successful test of an ion propulsion drone. (techevangeler.com)

techevangeler writes: Florida: An American company has created a fanless ion propulsion drone that is completely silent and has flown for more than four minutes in its initial flight. a company called In Defined Technology has named it the 'Silent Vents' drone whose flight mechanism is very interesting. It has two tiers of rows in which rows of electrodes are placed.

Comment Re:Cloudiness (Score 4, Insightful) 91

No, it makes you a drug dealer. "The first hit is free, try it out, no strings attached, honest!".

The fact one even has to consider how to 'take their data with them' (export APIs) means there is a lock-in for non-technical users.

My phone's microSD card doesn't require a vendor-specific API. When it gets near to full, I either decide to pop it out and stick it in a drawer and label it for later use, replacing with a new one, or back it up to a local drive and wipe it to use again (which TBH has its own set of problems for non-tech users...)

Exporting and *actually using* Google drive data is well beyond the skills of most non-technical users, sadly. Blame Google, or the users; it doesn't matter. Data storage management is not easy but cloud/smartphone providers have intentionally made it even harder.

Comment Re: Solving the wrong problem (Score 2) 65

I don't think self-teaching is innately rare. It is the default mind and skillset among the poor/rural communities even if they are for a number of reasons focused on more immediate needs for those skills.

Still there are definitely things which require experience and those tend to be more efficiently transferred with the guide. Usually the roadblocks are small pieces here and there. Perhaps that is the best blend, a self-learner combined with a mentor they can reach out to.

Comment Re:Solving the wrong problem (Score 1) 65

"And if there is a societal change, there is no need for Web 5."

I disagree with this. No matter how society changes human nature isn't going to change with it. There will never come a time when all people are trustworthy, it will forever remain that most people are usually honest in most ways. Social change can shift the ways around but that is it.

The most sound strategies are and always will be strategies that assume no trust.

I'm not specifically supporting THIS proposal and web 5 (or opposing) but something like this will be needed. I do disagree with the notion that blockchain is the key to every decentralized lock.

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