Best Buy Launches Recycle-By-Mail Program (cnet.com) 48
For $30, you can ship Best Buy a prepaid box filled with up to 15 pounds of unwanted electronics. CNET reports: Starting this month, two sizes of prepaid boxes are available on the Best Buy website: a 9-by-5-by-3-inch container that can carry up to 6 pounds for $23, and a larger, 18-by-14-by-4-inch box that can carry up to 15 pounds for $30. Once you've filled it up with approved electronics, you can take the box to a UPS location or arrange for a pickup.
The recycling-by-mail program is the latest salvo in Best Buy's campaign to achieve net-zero emissions by 2040. In April 2022, the company began offering a haul-away service that picks TVs, appliances and other products for recycling from customers' homes. You can also drop off unwanted electronics at Best Buy locations and trade in select merchandise for gift cards.
The recycling-by-mail program is the latest salvo in Best Buy's campaign to achieve net-zero emissions by 2040. In April 2022, the company began offering a haul-away service that picks TVs, appliances and other products for recycling from customers' homes. You can also drop off unwanted electronics at Best Buy locations and trade in select merchandise for gift cards.
data theft central (Score:1)
You just thought your private data was going somewhere to die. Someone is going to gather up your pictures, your tax data, and anything else interesting you left lying around on your recycled goods.
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Are the people using this service thinking about that?
I can drop my electronics off at a city site five days a week for free. And yes, I remove or break storage first.
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Are they coming to your house and checking what you put in the box?
You think my Mom is going to wipe something she wants to recycle?
For 0 dollars I can hit them with a hammer (Score:2, Funny)
Re: For 0 dollars I can hit them with a hammer (Score:1)
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Me, well my brother gave me an old mac around 2004, I have been holding on to it because... well, gift from my brother, I should really recycle it. My mom has a bun
Re: For 0 dollars I can hit them with a hammer (Score:3)
It is another to charge me 30 dollars and the effort to box up and ship something to Best Buy. Sorry, but no.
Zero carbon (Score:2)
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>"Pretty sure the UPS trucks aren't zero carbon."
Um, yeah. How is this going to achieve anything with carbon emissions? Even if transport wasn't involved, there isn't anything reducing "carbon emissions" in this equation. Not like they are going to "recycle" or "reuse" a broken mp3 player, busted speaker, sun-damaged keyboard, defective Game Boy, or crappy amplifier.
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some citys have free e-waste drop offs (Score:2)
some citys have free e-waste drop offs
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In our town Goodwill has multiple donation sites that are basically a large semi-truck stationed in the parking lots of some of the large grocery stores -- much more convenient than drive umpteen miles out of town to the dump, and they'll will take the e-waste at
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In the EU we have a directive (the WEEE) that states all e-waste must be recycled. A few exapmles where I live: electronics retailers have to accept a comparable old/defect appliance i8n return, that the customer wants to have recycled, at a new sale at no extra charge and municipalities have free turn-in e-waste collection stations as part of their garbage disposal program.
This is getting tiresome. (Score:5, Insightful)
Quite frankly the situation is getting to the point that retailers should be responsible for what they sell, including end of life disposal. Better yet make the manufacturers responsible for taking back their junk product that didn't last.
I actually like the phone, but the battery was a dud.
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Costs can be a pain especially with UPS batteries.
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>"Costs can be a pain especially with UPS batteries."
We don't have any problem with UPS batteries- which are pretty much all lead-acid. Almost 100% of lead acid batteries ARE actually recycled. The place we buy batteries from just picks up bad/dead ones from us at no cost when they drop off our order of new batteries. Now, was that cost built-in to the new batteries we are buying? I don't know. We aren't paying a core charge (like I do when I buy a car battery).
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E-Recycling is mostly a scam (Score:3, Interesting)
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> The reason they don't take CRT's is because there is nothing of value in them they can take.
Some of them have a reasonable amount of lead in the glass. It's a matter of how much energy it's worth vs. the market price.
Since Obama banned lead refining the price has gone up a bit.
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Another scam that made the news was they'd accept electronics for a recycling fee, fill a rented warehouse with them and disappear, leaving the electronics in someone else's warehouse.
Staples Free Recycling (Score:2)
https://www.staples.com/deals/it-s-recycling-day-every-day/BI3000592
and it doesn't cost anything.
It's nice that they take the lead-acid batteries from various UPS units, I have several of those a year that
get replaced. I've also recycles at least a half dozen computers and notebooks with them, but I ALWAYS
remove any disk drives, they get recycled with a hammer, or turned into model railroad parts (RE magnets).
As it is, I h
Re:Staples Free Recycling (Score:4, Funny)
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put it out for 'big-trash' day. Now, there's enough retro computer collectors, it might be sellable
through eBay or Facebook market place.
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does it really ship to BB? (Score:2)
Two things will happen. (Score:2)
1) Your data will be harvested, no matter what the terms or conditions say (they'll do it offshore).
2) It will most certainly not be sustainably reclaimed. Even the briefest look at those conditions existing RIGHT NOW related to e-waste reclamation suggests this is a joke.
They make a profit; you get a clean conscience.
Do it yourself (Score:3, Informative)
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> But then I'd have to go to Best Buy...
Can I sell you an extended warranty on whatever you'd like to buy today?
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I believe Best Buy will require you to give them your information, which they will use for their marketing purposes.
BleachBit (Score:2)
Your hard drives before sending them away
Rare earth metal "mining" (Score:2)
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That's why I collect dead hard drives and take the magnets out of them. They're useful for all sorts of things, and maybe someday I can sell them.
We have to pay THEM? (Score:3)
Why would I pay them to take the stuff? Most municipalities have some kind of recycling program which usually means electronics a few times a year.
As for data storage devices, pull them and use them for target practice. Oh, you live in a state where you can't do that? Sucks to be you.
for $0 (Score:3)
For $0.00 you can just put your 15 lbs in the garbage and someone will come pick it up in a service for which you are already paying.
Check around (Score:2)
Most cities and counties have a disposal site or event for electronics, old prescriptions, and household toxic chemicals.
Just ask around.