A presentation at UX London in in London, UK by Hidde de Vries
Digital transformation has an elephant in the room: the energy use of digital services can be enormous. In 2024, the World Bank estimated the internet to account for 1-4% of global greenhouse emissions, similar to aviation. The good news is: there are many opportunities to improve. As UX practitioners, we can reduce emissions at work.
In this talk, we’ll look at what the W3C’s new Web Sustainability Guideline are and how to apply them in practice. The session is aimed at ambitious UX practitioners, who want to learn more about centering people, planet and prosperity.
The following resources were mentioned during the presentation or are useful additional information.
From which I quoted: “Shaving off a single kilobyte in a file that is being loaded on 2 million websites reduces CO2 emissions by an estimated 2950 kg per month.”
Info on how emissions are calculated.
Annual report of the progress made in 2023 to 2024 towards making digital services and technologies in government more sustainable.
From which I got the quote: “In 10 years nothing you built today that depends on JS for the content will be available, visible, or archived anywhere on the web.””
They have metrics for what “green” means, provide data and a tool to look up your domain right now.
from which I got the chart that showed energy usage could double.
From which I got the quote that AI has the potential to reserve all the gains made in recent years.
By Alexandra Sasha Luccioni, Emma Strubell and Kate Crawford.
Compares the “AI to destroy all” camp with the “AI will save all” camp, and concludes, among other things, that we ‘cannot simply hope for the best outcome’.
full quote: “it looks like my server is doing 70% of all its work for these fucking LLM training bots that don’t to anything except for crawling the fucking internet over and over again.“
Full quote: “bandwidth used for downloading multimedia content [grew] by 50%. This increase is not coming from human readers, but largely from automated programs that scrape [Wikimedia] to feed images to AI models.”
comes with an exam you can do at the end