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URL:https://www.learndesk.us/class/6031358776311808/lesson/b4f2afd199c8f279848661cc8a06184b?ref=outlook-calendar
SUMMARY:UNIT 13
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260501T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260501T200000
LOCATION:https://www.learndesk.us/class/6031358776311808/lesson/b4f2afd199c8f279848661cc8a06184b?ref=outlook-calendar
DESCRIPTION: Excerpt from Link Rot by Kasumi Borczyk Trash collection is no longer the dirty work that it used to be. When Rick calls me &lsquo;Oscar the Grouch&rsquo; on mornings when I&rsquo;m feeling in a mood, I wear it proudly because we&rsquo;ve reclaimed the word&mdash;as they did with &lsquo;slut&rsquo; way back when. This is due, in large part, to two monumental events that have shaped the history of garbage collection: A cultural shift away from a lifestyle of high physical and non-renewable consumption, resulting in an almost negligible amount of actual garbage being produced, and The invisible hand of social progress hovering above what academics have called &lsquo;digital wastage&rsquo;, i.e. the vast sums of inconsequential data that exist online. At some point in time, the internet became a trash pile for our factoids and bereavements and, in true Borges-like fashion, the data centres that stored the world&rsquo;s information around us in large, environmentally controlled...

https://www.learndesk.us/class/6031358776311808/lesson/b4f2afd199c8f279848661cc8a06184b?ref=outlook-calendar
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