Planned obsolescence: Why things don't last
In the fight against planned obsolescence, the European Parliament wants to set minimum resistance criteria for products and better inform consumers about their durability. The aim is to encourage repair and reduce waste. The good news ? 77% of consumers in the EU would rather fix broken products than buy new ones. Comment on: Google + http://tinyurl.com/orh99s6 Facebook / europeanparliament Twitter / europarl_en

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Fighting Back Against Planned Obsolescence

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This is why we can't have nice things

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The French Do Not Care About Work

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Planned Obsolescence (ft. Louis Rossmann)

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Why don’t companies want you to repair your stuff? - Aaron Perzanowski

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The genius logic of the NATO phonetic alphabet

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How Robots Could Save $6+ Billion Worth Of Recyclables A Year | AI In Action

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It's Not Just Shein: Why Are ALL Your Clothes Worse Now?

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Why everything you buy is worse now

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Watchdog group tracks what really happens to your ‘recycled’ e-waste

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Plastic VS the Climate: The Lie We’ve All Believed

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I Compared US and European Roads… The Difference Is Shocking.

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Planned obsolescence

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Planned Obsolescence: How companies trick you into buying a new phone

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The Truth about Planned Obsolescence

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Why Your CPAP Stopped Working - Planned Obsolescence & Right To Repair Explained

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Apple Store vs. Repair Shop: What the Right to Repair Is All About | WSJ

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How easy is it to steal $10,000 from a locked phone?

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