Measuring product longevity as a counterbalance to planned obsolesence #145
Labels
layer:core
Regarding the core protocol (cost tracking, transactional fabric, etc)
project:paper
tag:cybernetics
For issues relating to systemic automation
type:discussion
Discussion or ideas for future direction, input welcome (don't be shy)
Many non-perishable products (shovel, blender, computer) can have an estimated lifetime based on:
Is there a way to a) allow producers to assign some sort of longevity metric to a product and b) measure if that product's lifespan exceeds the metric?
The idea here is that in capitalist markets, producers are incentivized to sell more products, where in many cases society benefits when they sell less products. For instance, buying a new washing machine every 3 years is an incredible waste of resources, but companies are incentivized, via planned obsolesence, to limit the useful life of their washing machines.
How can we reward producers that create good products instead of create a lot of products?
Is this possible? Is this necessary if all producers are worker-owned? Expand, explain, discuss...
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