Abstract

Digital waste encompasses all the unnecessary data cluttering our storage systems until we decide to address it. This includes redundant files, outdated emails and chats, and forgotten photos gathering digital dust. While dismissing digital waste as a mere inconvenience is tempting, its implications are unfortunately significant.

Why Does Digital Waste Matter?

To illustrate the impact of digital waste, let’s look at a hypothetical scenario.

Imagine a server farm housing around ten servers functioning as a private cloud. Seven servers (or the equivalent data capacity) are actively utilized, necessitating constant operation. This entails maintaining optimal climate conditions and establishing network connections.

Every operation consumes energy and this is just a fraction of a business’ overall technology operations. Internet searches, email exchanges, and employees’ casual browsing actually translate into increased carbon emissions. Add public cloud resources to the equation, and the environmental impact compounds further.

All online activities rely on servers that demand continuous power supply. The more data stored, the greater the energy consumption. This energy consumption often originates from processes emitting significant amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

So, where does digital waste fit into this equation?

More Digital Waste, More Energy Wastage

Regrettably, storage infrastructure cannot discern between essential and expendable data—it simply allocates resources as needed. While seemingly inconsequential on an individual basis—like retaining outdated company images—it collectively rivals the energy consumption of entire nations. Digital activities already surpass the pollution rates of countries like Norway and Switzerland and are poised to exceed those of the world’s top five most polluting nations by next year.

What Measures Can Mitigate Digital Waste?

Various strategies can mitigate energy consumption associated with data storage at both organizational and individual levels.

For organizations:

  • Investing in cloud storage can optimize storage space utilization within in-house infrastructure.
  • Adjusting power settings on business hardware helps curb energy usage during idle periods.
  • Regularly purge unnecessary data from storage, recycle bins, and email inboxes.
  • Minimize the transmission of non-essential messages.

For individuals:

  • Exercise discretion when saving and storing photos.
  • Activate dark mode on devices to reduce energy consumption.
  • Close unused applications and programs.
  • Disable Wi-Fi and Bluetooth when not in active use.

Ultimately, reducing digital waste yields a net positive outcome. Contact NetMGM to explore further ways to optimize your business’ technology utilization. Reach out to us at 888-748-2525 to learn more.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

You Have to Get Rid of Your Digital Waste

Rafiq Masri

With over 25 years of experience in Information Technology, Rafiq is one of the most accomplished, versatile and certified engineer in the field. He has spent the past 2 ½ decades administering and supporting a wide range of clients and has helped position Network Management, Inc. as a leader in the IT Managed Services space.

Rafiq has built a reputation for designing, building and supporting top notch IT infrastructures to match the business objectives and goals of his clients.

Embracing the core values of integrity, innovation, and reliability, Rafiq has a very loyal client base with some customer relationships dating back 20+ years.

Rafiq holds a bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Michigan and has completed graduate programs in Software Engineering and Business at Harvard and George Mason University. Rafiq is a former founder and CEO of Automation, Inc. in Ann Arbor, Michigan as well as a valued speaker on entrepreneurship and technology at industry events such as ExpoTech and others.