The penetration of the network of networks has only hit the Phone Number List growth spurt during the pandemic. And if in 2001 only 8% of the world's population had surrendered to the charms of the Internet, today that percentage is already Phone Number List 60%. Although our dependence on networks of networks is growing by leaps and bounds, the carbon emissions hidden in our rampant online consumption are often left in the shadows (even Phone Number List the infinite scrolling that we do daily on the internet steals even more oxygen from the already suffocating planet Earth).
In the carbon emissions emanating from Phone Number List internet, everything counts: from the device to which we connect to the network to the network infrastructures passing through the data centers. According tot Phone Number List BBC, the carbon emissions directly caused by the network of networks constitute 3.7% of the greenhouse gas emissions generated on a global scale. This is a proportion that exceeds the emissions derived from Phone Number List (2.5%), whose environmental reputation is, on the other hand, much weaker.
Furthermore, the metaverse that is just Phone Number List the corner will predictably (and exponentially) multiply the environmental footprint left behind by the internet. So what can we Internet users do to put an end to the "bad smoke" of the network of Phone Number List ? What we can do as users to curb the emissions generated by the internet First of all, we should consider using (whenever possible) a WiFi network instead of the mobile networks Phone Number List in our smartphone. Opting for 5G (or failing that, 4G) on our smartphone generates up to twice as much energy as WiFi. Another habit that we would do well to adopt (peremptorily) is to renew our smartphone less frequently (and in this sense, placate our fear of being outdated).