• just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    ORRRRR, or, or…just fucking stop companies and billionaires from being able to pollute the fuck out of everything like they have been.

    Turning down the temperature a bit doesn’t fix the collapsing oceans, the water we can’t drink, the air we can’t breathe, or the microplastics causing infertility.

    What it DOES do is give yet another corporation the ability to BLOCK THE FUCKING SUN.

    You honestly think this won’t be used to “coerce” money out of governments around the fucking globe if they don’t play ball?

    • AmidFuror@fedia.io
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      14 hours ago

      I wouldn’t be concerned about micro plastics and fertility. Latex, estrogen pills, and perpetually being online are having a far greater effect.

    • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Same for humans. Who needs that blinding orange fireball for anything. It’s so annoying making us warm, giving us free light and energy, and helping our bodies create Vitamin D.

  • MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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    15 hours ago

    Key points:

    the company had developed a special reflective particle and the technology to release millions of tons of it high into the atmosphere. The intended effect: to dim the light of the sun across the world and throw global warming into reverse.

    Humanity had gained the power to turn down the sun, and barely anyone on the planet even knew. What’s more, that untested power was now effectively for sale. In a world of rising chaos, sci-fi-pilled billionaires and nationalist leaders, a private company offering the means to control the world’s temperature — with almost no international laws regarding the deployment of such technology — was a disturbing prospect, thought Pasztor.

    almost exactly a year after he published the report he was contracted to write and a few months after he ended his relationship with the company amicably, Pasztor was troubled. Apart from a link to his report on Stardust’s homepage, there was little public indication that they were taking his recommendations for transparency seriously. The company had not published a code of conduct it had agreed on with Pasztor and had told him it would release. The website itself was difficult to find while we were reporting this article; two cyber experts confirmed to us that it contained a line of code that hid it from search engines so that it could only be found using the link. (Yedvab said the coding that hid the website was unintentional and the company has since fixed it.) Some scientists in the geoengineering community were also complaining that Stardust remained secretive about the chemistry of its particle and its plans for releasing them.

    The mechanics would be quite simple. Stardust envisages a fleet of around 100 planes — to begin with — flying into the stratosphere to deliver payloads of their particles, landing to reload, then immediately taking off again to repeat, continuously, every flight a tiny volcanic cough.

    Oh! The MAGATs enable Chemtrails! 🤣

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I really think we’d be better off just reducing GHG emissions as quickly as possible. I realize we’re not doing that, but that fact doesn’t necessarily make solar geoengineering (or solar radiation management, whatever you want to call it) a better idea. In fact, it might make it a worse idea. Geoengineering should only be done (if at all) in conjunction with rapid reductions in GHG emissions and carbon capture and sequestration. Doing geoengineering without GHG emissions reductions and carbon capture is at best a complete waste and at worst a total disaster.