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by sokoloff
1801 days ago
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Upvoted for an elegant solution (at least for consumers upgrading phones). I do wonder if the lead acid core charge works better than the bottle deposit because the value is more, because it's not that much extra hassle, or some other factor. I also am not sure (and never thought about it until just now) as to where the forfeited core charge money "goes" for consumers who buy a new phone (paying the core deposit) and then don't return a core phone within the required amount of time or if they buy a brand A phone and return an old brand B phone. But I suspect that the overall model could work pretty well with some of the details carefully thought out. (AFAIK, in the lead-acid battery case, I can't just go to a parts store and force them to buy my core for $20, but if I am buying a new battery, they are forced to take my old core instead of charging me the $20 core charge [or whatever it is nowadays].) |
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Aka, you buy an Apple phone at your carrier, you turn in your Samsung phone, and Samsung gets sent the bill for the phone's collection and recycling. This would work even if someone just wanted to drop an old phone off at the store: Samsung's still responsible for footing the bill, so stores have no reason not to collect.