• iii@mander.xyz
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    4 days ago

    Is that the goal? I’m not sure that’s even possible. You’d have to construct everything from the chemically inert like noble gasses. Yet by the very nature of them, they’re hard to construct anything out of. Ceramics, I think, is the better material? Although they still last centuries.

    So I’m confused what your utopia looks like?

    • Orbituary@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      How do you infer me wanting utopia from this?

      The point is that because the plastics dissolve, it may just give license to people to continue dumping into the ocean because now it’s out of sight and out of mind. Rinse, lather, repeat a few trillion times and now we have yet another chemical problem causing some unforseen thing.

      Look, dude, I get it. All of this is exhausting. But so is dealing with humans who refuse to spend 30 seconds asking themselves what the consequences of a thing are. The headline is eye-catching, but what does it mean for us in 20 years if this were widely adopted. Would it be OK or would it cause new issues? It’s also misleading: “Goodbye Microplastics?” It’s not like everything will suddenly disappear or there will be 100% global adoption of this technology.

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        4 days ago

        I think we have a different approach to the same problem

        All of this is exhausting. But so is dealing with humans who refuse to spend 30 seconds asking themselves what the consequences of a thing are

        From my point of view: that’s going to remain. Any animal does so, human not excluded. Human’s can’t even stop war, something 99% of the population agree is a bad idea.

        The headline is eye-catching, but what does it mean for us in 20 years if this were widely adopted.

        Will it even be widely adopted? Chance is small. If it is widely adopted, are the consequences better than the status quo? Hopefully yes? I haven’t investigated the manufacturing process to detail.