• Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    The weird thing about the Phoebus cartel is that it wasn’t actually evil. It was bulb manufacturers agreeing not to trick the public on longer life bulbs (that due to the technology wasted all the potential light as heat) in order to keep electricity cheap for everyone. That is they could sell a longer life bulbs but the electricity use would be much higher making it not an actual savings and making everyone pay more for electricity because you were wasting it with long life bulbs.

    It wasn’t until halogen, then compact fluorescent and now led that a longer life bulb was possible without being grossly wasteful of electricity.

    • spujbOP
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      6 months ago

      nope not really

      Nevertheless, both internal comments from cartel executives[6] and later findings by a US court [10] suggest that the direct motive of the cartel in decreasing bulb lifespan was to increase profits by forcing customers to buy bulbs more frequently. -Wikipedia

      my understanding as a layperson is that the heat thing was simply a cover story—as often happens with these large companies. in the 21st century i’d compare it to oil companies and their “carbon footprint” bs; not false outright but certainly messging designed to pull eyes away from the real issue. i welcome resources that contradict this, tho

      • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        my understanding as a layperson is that the heat thing was simply a cover story

        A thicker filament lasts longer but radiates more heat into the infra red. There was no compact fluorescents or LED’s. By not undercutting each other, the cartel profited more but this also benefitted the consumers. If the cartel hadn’t done it, the government should have.

        It would be the same if a cartel formed a few years ago to only sell LED bulbs instead of incandescent. Then a bunch of yokels with their “Don’t take my incandescent light bulbs and my gas stoves!” got their representatives to investigate. A congressional record of manufactures conspiring to switch to more efficient (but also more expensive) LED lighting would then exist for future generations to think there was an evil conspiracy. When really it was something the government should have regulated.

        • spujbOP
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          6 months ago
          • so why keep it a secret?
          • by what dollar amount did this benefit consumers (saved cost of energy minus cost of new bulbs)?
          • what about the environmental costs of making the product disposable? are they negligible?

          not disagreeing with you i am just looking for specifics that i wasn’t able to find. again, from an outside perspective, all the excellent information you provided looks like a “plausible enough” cover story for upping profits without actually holding real water.

          • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Wikipedia doesn’t have specific numbers but says this:

            "The initial cost of an incandescent bulb is small compared to the cost of the energy it uses over its lifetime. "

            “Because of this, the lifetime of a filament lamp is a trade-off between efficiency and longevity. The trade-off is typically set to provide a lifetime of 1,000 to 2,000 hours for lamps used for general illumination.”

            https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incandescent_light_bulb#:~:text=During ordinary operation%2C the tungsten,off between efficiency and longevity.

            I don’t have exact numbers but my best evidence is that there is no Phoebus cartel today yet incandescent bulbs are still designed to last the same as they did 100 years ago. This is most likely because of the physical limitations that Wikipedia claims.

            • spujbOP
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              6 months ago

              !delta since i now more accurately understand the engineering and costs behind the situation. i still think it’s hella suspicious that they kept this a secret and in no way do i think this was all done out of pure good will lol

              • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                As I already said, it wasn’t out of pure good will. But neither was it pure evil. It was a decision that benefited both them and the consumers. And I can’t find any source that it was kept a secret. They were giant organizations with testing procedures to verify. It seems like it was simply delayed justice for governments to declare it illegal. Wiki even says in both the UK and US rulings that there were legitimate reasons to lower lifespan.

                • spujbOP
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                  6 months ago

                  re: pure evil—no, of course not. no motive is pure evil, this isn’t disney. but motives can be purely profitable, as is the case with oil. this is my contest, that the cartel was considerably motivated by profit with a less significant regard for consumers. call that evil if you like, but i’m trying to be specific here.

                  re: secret—details of the cartel were not discovered until 1940 by a U.S. investigation as reported here here. information that is not available to the public counts as a secret, even if there is no original document stating that “we are keeping this a secret.”

                  re: us and uk rulings—well of course that is what they found. the 77 billion in health damages caused by oil production are legitimate costs of continuing production too. the government is pretty well known to side with capital so in this case third party reporting and calculations are of more weight to me.

                  i will say that the reporting surrounding this is abominable. i’m upset that what could have been a clear history lesson has become muddied up by npr/youtube pop-culturey gossip.

                  you’ve already changed my opinion and i don’t think my weak mind can handle too much more of this, just wanted to clear up those points lol

                  • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                    6 months ago

                    this is my contest, that the cartel was considerably motivated by profit with a less significant regard for consumers.

                    This was in my first reply that agrees with you that you have been arguing against until now:

                    “By not undercutting each other, the cartel profited more but this also benefitted the consumers”

                    information that is not available to the public counts as a secret,

                    Businesses are under no obligation to publicly publish everything they do. Secret implies they tried to hide it.

                    What did Elon Musk have for lunch at the SpaceX cafeteria today? He didn’t announce it on Twitter. Does that make it a secret?

                    Is it bad that the Phoebus companies profited more by reducing carbon emissions?

                    Edit: sorry for being so aggressive but reducing carbon emissions should be a good thing.