Tech
IT Sustainability Think Tank: Don’t believe Big Tech’s green IT hype | Computer Weekly
When I first started in IT asset disposition more than two decades ago, sustainability barely registered in boardroom discussions. Regulations such as the WEEE Directive in 2005 were among the first to bring environmental responsibility into the IT industry.
Fast forward to today and the picture could not be more different. Almost every supplier now presents themselves as “green”. That progress is welcome – but it has also created confusion, noise, and, in many cases, outright greenwashing.
Studies suggest that as many as 90% of technology firms engage in some form of exaggerated environmental marketing. For IT directors tasked with reducing emissions and reporting on ESG performance, separating fact from fiction has become a critical leadership skill.
Spotting the red flags
The signs of greenwashing are often easy to spot once you know where to look. Suppliers that rely on vague promises – “eco-friendly” or “green by design” – without supporting data should raise concern. So should carbon-neutral badges built on offsets rather than real reductions.
Selective reporting is another red flag: celebrating progress in one product line or geography while ignoring the larger footprint. Net-zero pledges with no short-term milestones are equally problematic.
And in IT asset disposal, I’ve seen providers promote hard drive shredding as sustainable, ignoring the embodied carbon wasted in destroyed assets. Others claim “zero landfill” while quietly exporting residual waste overseas. These are all examples where the marketing outpaces measurable impact.
Asking for the right evidence
The best way to cut through the hype is to demand verifiable evidence. Genuine suppliers will align with recognised standards – and IT directors should know which ones matter.
For carbon data, look for near-term and net-zero targets validated by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), with greenhouse gas inventories prepared under the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol. The highest bar is third-party assurance to ISO 14064-3, which tests the reliability of reported data.
Energy claims deserve the same scrutiny. A promise of “100% renewable power” should be backed by long-term power purchase agreements, not just annual certificates.
When it comes to hardware, credible indicators include lifecycle assessments under ISO 14040/44, Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs), and independent certifications such as EPEAT or TCO Certified, which measure repairability, recyclability, and material use.
And for ITAD specifically, do not settle for generic recycling statements. Credible partners will provide item-level certificates of reuse, refurbishment, or destruction – giving you the audit trail regulators expect.
Independent verification is critical
In sustainability reporting, the highest bar is independent verification. Assurance reports carried out under ISO 14064-3, for example, are designed to test the reliability of carbon data and will state whether the auditor’s opinion is “limited” or “reasonable.”
IT directors should ask who performed the assurance, what data was covered, and how wide the scope was. While relatively few ITAD providers currently go this far, these frameworks are a useful benchmark for separating genuine commitment from marketing claims.
For organisations with international operations, directors may also look at broader frameworks. Standards such as e-Stewards and R2v3 are widely used in North America, while EcoVadis ratings, CDP disclosures, and TCFD alignment provide consistency across global supply chains.
Building internal competency
Even the strongest frameworks will not help if the buying organisation lacks the capability to interrogate them. Procurement and legal teams should receive training on the Green Claims Code and on how to interpret assurance statements. Major supplier claims should be reviewed by cross-functional panels that include IT, finance, and sustainability leads.
Directors should also consider building a simple scoring rubric for evaluating bids, contracting for transparency with audit rights and penalties for misrepresentation, and piloting vendor promises on smaller projects before committing to long-term deals.
Above all, investing in carbon data capability inside the organisation enables IT leaders to benchmark supplier performance year on year, rather than taking claims at face value.
A leadership responsibility
Sustainability in technology is no longer cosmetic – it is a quality metric that shapes compliance, reputation, and long-term value. IT directors are on the front line of this shift.
Every time you insist on evidence rather than adjectives, you raise the bar for the industry. False claims thrive where scrutiny is weak. Treat environmental disclosures with the same rigour as financial ones: verify, assure, and hold vendors accountable to measurable outcomes. By doing so, you protect your organisation and help push the technology sector toward genuine, lasting sustainability.
Tech
In a Big Reversal, Zohran Mamdani Tells NYC Agencies to Use TikTok
New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani, who rode a social media-fueled campaign to Gracie Mansion, is reversing an Eric Adams–era directive barring TikTok from government-owned devices. Local agencies will now be able to post about their projects on the app, though with new guardrails to protect city networks.
“The Mamdani administration is committed to using every tool in our toolbox to communicate with New Yorkers,” says the email to agencies, obtained by WIRED. “At a moment when people are turning to city government for information about free services, emergency situations, upcoming events, and more, we want to open up new avenues of communication with the public and help deliver the information New Yorkers need.”
In August 2023, then-mayor Adams barred the use of TikTok on government devices, joining the ranks of other state and federal agencies that at the time deemed the app a major security risk. Adams spokesperson Jonah Allon said then that the city’s Cyber Command office had decided that TikTok, which was owned by the Chinese-based company ByteDance, “posed a security threat to the city’s technical networks and directed its removal from city-owned devices.”
The directive resulted in a number of popular city-run accounts shutting down, including accounts for the NYC Departments of Sanitation and Parks and Recreation. As of Tuesday morning, the accounts’ bios read, “This account was operated by NYC until August 2023. It’s no longer monitored.”
Now, these TikTok accounts will be allowed to reopen with a few new rules aimed at protecting the security of NYC’s networks and devices while allowing agencies to communicate with citizens on the popular app. In order to use TikTok, agencies will be required to use separate, government-issued devices for the app that “cannot contain sensitive or restricted data, and they cannot be used for email, internal systems, or privileged access,” according to the email to agencies. Agencies will designate specific staff from media and press offices to run the TikTok accounts with city government emails, not personal ones.
“In a fragmented media landscape, more and more people—especially younger people—are looking beyond the four corners of their television screen to stay informed,” Mamdani said in a statement to WIRED. “Our responsibility is simple: Meet people where they are. That means stepping outside our comfort zones and communicating in ways that reflect how New Yorkers actually live, work, and connect.”
Mamdani’s rule reversal comes after his November election that relied heavily on social media to conduct voter outreach. Mamdani leveraged TikTok to recruit volunteers and amplify his policy platform. Over his first few months in office, Mamdani has continued to leverage social media platforms, publishing a variety of public-service announcements related to city-run programs.
Ahead of dangerous winter weather in January, Mamdani published a video to the official @nycmayor account on Instagram asking New Yorkers to sign up for the city’s free emergency communications program, NotifyNYC. The program netted more than 32,000 new subscribers in the four days after the video was released, according to stats provided by Mamdani’s office. Last year, New York City Emergency Management ran a $240,000 advertising round for NotifyNYC, acquiring around 48,000 new subscribers. Mamdani also created a handful of videos asking New Yorkers to join a Department of Sanitation snow-shoveling program. Around 5,000 people signed up, tripling the number previously enrolled in the program.
The situation has also changed for the app. In January 2026, TikTok finalized a deal with the Trump administration to form a new US-based version of the company run by American investors, including Oracle. The consortium of American investors staved off a nationwide ban of the app.
Tech
The $1 Million Aston Martin Valhalla Makes You Drive Better Than You Thought Possible
Yes, it’s a supercar, but it’s also sold very much as a track and road car, one that accommodates a passenger, all of which means road trips and weekend-away stays are very much possible. Well, they would be if there were anywhere at all to store luggage. Lamborghini managed to find some luggage space in its Revuelto design, so there’s no excuse here, really.
The design department otherwise has had a field day. Top-mounted exhausts, dihedral doors, and even an F1-style roof snorkel to accompany that air-braking rear wing deliver an exterior that is nothing short of arresting. Somehow, none of this looks garish or out of place on the Valhalla in person. Everything has a purpose, and nothing seems to scream as flexing or showing off. There’s a cohesion to the Valhalla aesthetic that others might not manage.
Inside, it is much more comfortable than you would imagine. The one-piece carbon-fiber seats look like they are going to be tricky, but on my two-hour road drive, they were supportive and, yes, comfortable. Visibility is surprisingly good, but a camera system is required for the rear view mirror because there’s no rear window. The rest of the interior is minimal, but the steering wheel is excellent (which, as Jony Ive will tell you, is no mean feat) and neatly signals some motorsport cool.
Photograph: Jeremy White
The one gripe for the interior is the dash and center screens, which are clear and responsive, and offer up the usual smartphone mirroring options, but they aren’t luxurious. We’re seeing a lot more effort these days with screen design from Ferrari’s new Luce as well as BMW in the iX3 and i3, but here, Aston has decidedly functional, off-the-shelf-looking displays. If I were parting with a million dollars, I might want more consideration here.
Odin’s Beard
On the road and track is where the Valhalla excels. Impressive doesn’t come close, and, despite the delays, the patience shown by Aston has clearly paid dividends. The ride is superb, as well as being ridiculously quick. The chassis is exceptionally agile, making the car feel alert and light. There are enormous reserves of grip to match the formidable braking and acceleration, and as a result, this is a car that flatters you; it effortlessly seduces you into driving much harder and better than you think you can, all while giving you levels of confidence you wouldn’t think possible.
I’ve driven the Lamborghini Revuelto, and yes, it’s exciting, but also there’s a part of you that is wary—the part that knows that if you don’t keep your wits about you 100 percent of the time, things will go bad very quickly. The Valhalla offers up all of that fun and excitement, but almost none of the trepidation. It is gratifying and intuitive to drive. Anyone can fully enjoy this car, not merely those used to track days. Some will say the engine note is not as full-throated as might be expected in such a car, but others will be having so much fun they won’t care. Nor should they.
Tech
AI Has Flooded All the Weather Apps
You may have noticed a drop of AI in your weather app lately. As companies race to infuse artificial intelligence into every product, the wave has come for the humble weather app.
The Weather Company, operator of the Weather Channel, today released a revamped version of its Storm Radar app, featuring an AI-powered Weather Assistant that lets users customize how they view forecasts and weather maps, toggling between layers like radar, temperature, and weather conditions like wind and lightning.
It can also sync with other apps, like your calendar, to send text notifications and weather summaries that tie info about the upcoming weather into your daily plans. You can stick a voice on it to talk like an old-timey radio weatherman, if you’re into that. Like most weather apps, it gets the data comes from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Weather Service (NWS).
The app costs $4 per month. It is available on iOS only for now, but the company says an Android version is coming eventually.
“We wanted to build an experience that would be a weather level-up for anybody, really, from a casual observer to a seasoned storm chaser,” says Joe Koval, a senior meteorologist at the Weather Company. “If you’re looking for advice on when the weather will be good to walk your dog tomorrow, you no longer have to look at a bunch of different disparate weather data elements and try to figure out the answer to that question yourself.”
You can find the weather on your phone already, of course. Android and iOS devices typically place the weather prominently beside the time. Google and Apple have both fused their weather apps into their smartphones directly. AI features have since been infused, offering insights and summaries about the day to come.
But there are third-party weather apps galore, like Storm Radar, Carrot Weather, Rain Viewer, and Acme Weather—an app from the former Dark Sky app creators. New weather apps like Rainbow Weather aim to be AI-first. Weather services are also being integrated directly into AI chatbots, like Accuweather, which recently launched an app directly in OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
“Everyone has their idea of what they want in a weather app, what data they’re interested in, how they’re interested in it being presented,” says Adam Grossman, a founder of the DarkSky app. “How do you build a single weather app that works for everybody?”
DarkSky, one of the most popular iOS weather apps, was bought by Apple in 2020 and merged into its Apple Weather service. Grossman eventually left Apple to start Acme Weather, with the goal of making a weather prediction service that better telegraphs the uncertainty of forecasting.
“No matter how good your forecast is, you’re going to be wrong,” Grossman says. “That’s something that weather apps traditionally haven’t done a great job of doing. Our approach is trying to figure out how to add those pieces of context back in.”
Repositories of weather information usually come from government sources, like NOAA or other global weather services that collect data from weather satellites, radar, weather balloons, and on-the-ground instruments. All that data is fed into weather prediction models that simulate the physics of the atmosphere. Those predictions are often generated by resource-intensive supercomputers, but machine learning models have trimmed that processing down, making predictions quicker. (Though sometimes less accurate, which can be accounted for by comparing multiple models.)
Weather apps like Storm Radar and Acme Weather translate that bounty of information by corroborating and compiling the models, then helping to create high-resolution maps and a visual representation of the data, an area where AI can also be particularly useful.
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