It seems that we’re moving to a digital society in
which we only read and write electronically. A paperless society in which information
is being “dematerialized”. Really? Not quite.
Since the arrival of the micro-computer in the 1970s the
number of printed pages increased by 3% each year. Since the introduction of
e-mail, paper consumption increased by 40%. And look at all the e-mails, the
e-books and all that e-content: as if it was drifting somewhere in the cloud or
in the “e-air” in an immaterial and almost virtual way. True: there is no paper
involved. And indeed: thousands of kilos of books can now be reduced to a
series of electronic files. But this doesn’t mean that the information
de-materialized. On the contrary.
The information has to stay somewhere: on servers and
data centers. This equipment needs cooling systems that are running 24/7 and an
increasing amount of electricity that has to be produced somewhere out of
something. Every year tens of millions of servers are added to this growing and
energy consuming data infrastructure.
And don’t forget that digital data has to be accessed
and travel from sender to receiver. We already use 50% more energy to move
bytes than we do to move planes in global aviation. Data traffic increases each year. In 2015 Google recorded 6 billion searches per day. Smartphone technology has led to a skyrocketing production of audio-visual data (pictures, videos, music). This information doesn't only travel through the air. It needs a growing number of (transoceanic) cables, satellites, antennas, terminals, etc. As a consequence the ICT sector's demand for metal tripled since the 1980s.
This was just a quick reminder of how material the digitalization
process is. We’re not dematerializing but rematerializing, heavily.
Sources:
- http://science.time.com/2013/08/14/power-drain-the-digital-cloud-is-using-more-energy-than-you-think/
- Vinck, Dominique, Humanités Numériques: La culture face aux nouvelles technologies, Le Cavalier Bleu Editions, 2015.
Loved reading this thhank you
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