In the field of air and water pollution control equipment, over the years I’ve assisted many companies in lowering emission rates and/or achieving compliance with air quality standards. As a consultant, I’ve had the opportunity to work with a variety of players in the metals processing industry, everything from lead, copper and aluminum smelters to facilities that deal with the remediation of lead and acid in batteries. Most of my experiences stem from the Southern California area, which has the country’s most stringent environmental regulations.
Continue reading "If People Only Knew" »
Earth Day has always been a holiday like New Years for boomer environmentalists like me—a festive opportunity for resolutions to improve our lives. So we make an annual effort to recycle more and drive less, and maybe it helps a little. But recently the market has discovered that green sells, so Earth Day is suddenly big in a bad way. Thanks to the numerous electronics recycling events planned for this week, Earth Day may be the single most harmful day of the year for the environment and human health.
Continue reading "Winning the Earth Day Shell Game" »
As Earth Day 2008 grew near, someone happened to ask me my thoughts about the annual holiday. I had to admit that since I’ve been working in the e-waste recycling industry for 31 years, it’s hard to get too excited about Earth Day any longer. For me and many others, every day is Earth Day.
Continue reading "After 31 Years of Recycling, Earth Day is a Lifestyle" »
In a recent blog on ZDnet, Heather Clancy asks why more effort isn't going into refurbishing technology equipment. I have a twofold answer: 1) equipment manufacturers continue to make every clever argument they can to entice us to buy new boxes--no surprise, and 2) lots of IT people don't trust the cold hard numbers that quantify the financial benefits of a longer lifecycle.
Continue reading "Reuse is the New Latest Thing" »
Let's pretend that we are all big PC manufacturers, and that we want to sell more boxes. Since everybody's talking about being more "green," maybe we could say that it's more environmentally friendly to trade in that old PC on a new one! Yeah, that's it—older PCs aren't worth as much, so companies might have to pay to recycle them. That makes buying new systems cheaper in the long run than keeping the old ones, right?
Continue reading "OEMs Are the Greenest!" »
One man stands with what appears to be an old seat cushion strapped to the top of his head, while another man welds steel while wearing a pair of cheap sunglasses and a piece of newspaper over his face. In another image, three hefty men stand on one end of a flimsy wooden plank while their coworker stands on the opposite end, which extends like a narrow bridge over a precipice so he can reach his work target.
Continue reading "Safety First – Even Outside Our Industry" »
As the turning of a new year takes me further into middle age (if this is my halfway point, I will live to 106), I feel that I have accumulated enough IT related wisdom to comfortably afford parting with some of it. The following does not necessarily represent the opinions of the staff or management of Redemtech:
Continue reading "Bob's 2008 Predictions" »
Last summer, Redemtech commissioned a study with the Ponemon Institute to explore the root causes behind data breaches that are providing so many companies with so much bad press. We initially suspected that the trouble begins when assets are disconnected from the network to move or retire equipment. The study was conducted with 735 security professionals from mid-size to large organizations, in both government and the private sector.
Continue reading "Off-Network Security Risk No Longer Off the Radar" »
I attended the E-Scrap conference in Atlanta last week, where 900 of my colleagues and I spent two days debating the state of electronics recycling. Redemtech is not itself a recycler, but uses partners to process many millions of pounds of electronics each year. So we are part of the industry by association, and we stay in close touch to ensure our downstream vendors are compliant with industry best practices. The various sessions completely ignored a glaring deficiency in the trade: the majority of electronics owners choose NOT to recycle their old computers and other e-junk when they are done with it. Stated more bluntly, the customer doesn't like, or think they need, what we are selling.
Continue reading "E-Wasted, But Planning for a Better Day" »
My level of disgust for the U.S. Department of Defense is at a new high. Being in the data security business where “DoD compliant” is good currency, I recoil at the mention of the DoD standard for anything. One thing I know - their standards are low.
Continue reading "The DoD Standard: Certifiable Zero Accountability" »
My company, Ponemon Institute, has been researching the issue of data breaches: the cost, the business impact, organizations’ response and what seem to be the most prevalent causes. Our latest research project was conducted to find out about loss or theft of data when off-network electronic devices are the target.
Continue reading "Study Finds Off-Network Security Off-Track" »
It’s easy to steal data—just walk away with it. Despite billions spent on IT security, the Ponemon Institute’s National Survey on the Insecurity of Off-Network Security has found that many corporations are failing to address the root cause of more than half of all data breaches: the loss or theft of data-bearing assets. The good news is that remediation of off-network security gaps, though not easy, can be straightforward.
Continue reading "Doors Locked, Windows Wide Open" »
Nothing makes industry analysts and media wonks happier than when an emerging market begins to consolidate. Companies are bought and sold. The big get bigger, the small guys fail; fortunes are made and jobs are lost. It all makes for some very melodramatic story telling that often overlooks a very fundamental question: is it good for customers?
Continue reading "The Healthy Benefits of Organic Growth" »
The European Union's WEEE Directive has been touted as a model for electronics producer responsibility, but many do not realize that years after its passage, the law is only now taking effect—country by country (for example, the Directive went into effect in the U.K. on July 1). From a recycling infrastructure and capacity perspective, the unfortunate truth for WEEE is that Europe is unprepared to accept the tsunami of e-waste that the law will generate, and its implementors' near-term efforts will favor expediency over environmental stewardship.
Continue reading "WEEE: Ready or Not" »
Redemtech has been a leading sponsor of the Gartner IT and Software Asset Management Summit for years. The conference was always busy, but our most meaningful customer contact has often occurred at relaxed moments, i.e. parties—adult beverage in hand—when conversation could easily turn to the important stuff like kids, vacations, and critical business issues. This year we decided to forego paid participation at the ITAM conference, and invite a few customers to a genuine Nashville honky-tonk to share some quality time.
Continue reading "Honky-Tonk ITAM" »
Good asset management doesn’t cost, it pays. This truth is often missed by corporate leaders who think that asset management is something business has to afford. The hard lessons my grandparents practiced on the land are a model for everyone who needs to do more with less.
Continue reading "Everything I Needed to Know about Good Stewardship I Learned from My Grandparents" »
Business Week's cover story last week was about how Six Sigma nearly killed innovation at 3M. The implication is that innovation is somehow compromised by rigorous, data-driven management, which I think is a false choice.
Continue reading "Innovation Needs Six Sigma...Eventually" »
It’s good news that concern for data privacy has become a public priority for so many companies. Trouble is, if policy is crafted at the executive level and passed down to management for execution without a mandate for inspection and measurement of outcomes, a charade often results.
Continue reading "Relax...We Have a Policy for That" »