Summary

Most European countries moved clocks forward one hour on Sunday, marking the start of daylight saving time (DST), a practice increasingly criticized.

Originally introduced during World War I to conserve energy, DST returned during the 1970s oil crisis and now shifts Central European Time to Central European Summer Time.

Despite a 2018 EU consultation where 84% of nearly 4 million respondents supported abolishing DST, implementation stalled due to member state disagreement.

Poland, currently holding the EU presidency, plans informal consultations to revisit the issue amid broader geopolitical priorities.

  • @atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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    4619 days ago

    I will never understand why people want the time we only use for 3 months to be the time we use for the whole year. I would rather people just be able to admit that December is dark (for the northern hemisphere) and we can do shit at a different time.

      • @Eclippsiss@lemmy.world
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        318 days ago

        Totally this discussion has been going on for ages let’s just say its dumb in this fay and age and stop it.

    • stebo
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      1619 days ago

      wdym 3 months? both CET and CEST are used approximately half a year

      • @dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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        1218 days ago

        In North America DST is used from second Sunday of March until first Sunday of November.

        This means there are 239 days in DST, and 126 days out of DST in 2025. Close to 2 to 1 ratio.

        I know it’s different with CEST and CET, and it sucks even more donkeyballs there, when the sun sets around 4PM (instead of 5) regardless.

        DST should really be the standard in most places. You want more sunlight in the afternoon, not in the morning.

        • stebo
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          118 days ago

          I prefer more sunlight in the morning. It’s better for your circadian rhythm and it is easier to wake up when it’s bright outside.

    • @bradboimler@lemmy.world
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      218 days ago

      It’s the standard. It’s what clocks are “supposed” to be set at. DST forces everyone to pretend it’s another time. Let people take advantage of summer daylight how they see fit rather than forcing them to.

  • fatalicus
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    3218 days ago

    The simple fact is that on the Monday after DST starts, more people have heart attacks and strokes.

    Meaning that not going away from it means people will continue to die from it.

    • @Psythik@lemm.ee
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      1019 days ago

      The only time I’m reminded that DST is a thing in most of the world, is when people are complaining about it online after it already switched over.

  • @withabeard@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Mid-day should be the middle of the day. Mid-night should be the middle of the night.

    If you like more light in the evening morning go to bed late and wake up late. If you like light in the morning evening, go to bed early and wake up early.

    Stop fucking with the clocks and making nonsensible decisions

    • @JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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      6519 days ago

      Mid-day should be the middle of the day. Mid-night should be the middle of the night.

      You’d need new clocks, those times drift every day, so 12:00 midday would need to change automatically.

        • Yeather
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          218 days ago

          Morons, people who didn’t read it fully, and people who want to encourage discourse.

      • @SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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        1019 days ago

        There are a lot of regions that are put into the wrong time zone, because that’s easier for business. They’re not even close to 12:00 being the middle of the day especially during DST.

    • @huppakee@lemm.ee
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      2119 days ago

      Yes, but the EU is split into four time zones now and if you implement this technically there would be many more:

      8 if we’d have 30-min time-zones 16 if we’d have 15-min time-zones 24 if we’d have 10-min time-zones 48 if we’d have 5-min time-zones 240 if we’d have 1-min time-zones

      I’m not saying we should keep dst, but we can’t have everyone have midday at 12:00 and midnight at 00:00.

      • Pennomi
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        19 days ago

        You can keep 1 hour time zones just fine. It still puts noon within 1 hour of mid day, which you don’t get with DST.

      • @Hawke@lemmy.world
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        519 days ago

        This but unironic. Employers just do what everyone is doing, and will stop when everyone else does.

        • @azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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          019 days ago

          You’re more likely to win the euromillion than to successfully shift norms away from the 8:30-18:00 working hours. This shit is baked into every employment contract out there. I work an office job where it doesn’t matter so much, but anyone who works shifts or a time-sensitive job is stuck there basically forever regardless of the time zone.

    • ☂️-
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      18 days ago

      my problem with that is thats not really up to me, if i have to be up for work or down for work in a given time. and id love to leave work and have a bit of sunlight left.

    • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      519 days ago

      If you like more light in the evening, go to bed late and wake up late.

      What about people who are in school or employed?

    • @AdamEatsAss@lemmy.world
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      519 days ago

      We need a standard system for tracking time. If every city decides their own time based on the sun it will be chaos.

        • @mangaskahn@lemmy.world
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          1219 days ago

          I’ve had way too many conversations with people that simply can’t comprehend how that works. “But then we’d have to do everything so much earlier, it would be dark all the time.” I try to explain that we’d still do everything at the same time of day, just call it something different, but they just can’t wrap their minds around that.

        • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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          219 days ago

          China has one time zone, but in Xinjiang they use local time anyway. Getting everyone on one time zone for daily use is unlikely.

    • rockerface 🇺🇦
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      -1019 days ago

      While we’re at it, cancel the time zones. I have no fucking clue why we’re still pretending everyone wakes up at the same time of the day all over the world. All it does is mess up scheduling for when you actually want to talk to people on the other side of the world.

      • @AdamEatsAss@lemmy.world
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        1119 days ago

        How would we decide to handle the date with no time zones? Half the world would have a date switch during the daytime. Not necessarily impossible to navigate but it would be confusing for a while.

        • rockerface 🇺🇦
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          -119 days ago

          That is up to the people to decide. Have the date switch at 00:00 whenever that is, or switch it at whatever time is the middle of the night - I just want to be able to see the time written out and be able to tell how many hours from now that’s happening without googling what flavor of time fuckery any specific time zone abbreviation means. I don’t think changing dates is going to be more confusing than some countries having 15 minutes ahead of GMT time zones or screwing up everyone’s circadian rhythms twice a year.

          • @nolefan33@sh.itjust.works
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            919 days ago

            That’s going to be way worse. I can get down with no timezones, but if we replace time zones with date zones you’ll end up with two locations where the same instant of time is either March 2nd at 3am or March 1st at 3am. There really just isn’t an easy way to handle time that works for all weird geographies and also makes it easy to schedule things across an ocean. But also, fuck daylight savings, that’s a totally unnecessary way of making it all worse than it needs to be.

            • rockerface 🇺🇦
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              519 days ago

              I don’t mind just changing the date a 0 hours everywhere at once, personally. Though, there’s also a thing Japan already does where they list time at 25:00, 26:00 and so on - meaning 1 AM, 2 AM, but tomorrow. I think that might be handy for when you want to list the time that would technically be tomorrow but still during the current daylight period.

            • @Azzu@lemm.ee
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              19 days ago

              But… That’s already the case even with timezones… There already is an international date line where one side is a day off the other.

  • @Kuma@lemmy.world
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    1418 days ago

    I would have never known if it wasn’t because a coworker told me or because of articles like these. My cat wakes me up at 7- 7:30 and he did that this morning too, so I was very surprised that I slept only 7 hours instead of 8 (before I knew). But the funnits part is that my cat followed DST haha

  • @FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    1418 days ago

    They need to seriously quit this bullshit. It serves no practical purpose in our modern society, while also having tangible negative effects. So why keep doing it?

    I enthusiastically support getting rid of this nonsense.

      • @Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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        217 days ago

        But wouldn’t it be neat if midnight was att 00:00 and mid day was 12:00?

        Also, you don’t get more daylight by moving the clock. You get more clock.

        • @ynthrepic@lemmy.world
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          116 days ago

          Time of day is a human invention. We can assign the date lines wherever we like.

          Like Japan was nuts. Dark at 3pm in winter. Light at 3am in summer. They’d benefit by shifting that shit two hours forward for sure.

          • @Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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            116 days ago

            I disagree. The angle of the sun is not a human invention. Trying to invent something from scratch based on that, I would definitely mark one time as “the darkest” and another “the lightest”.

            I agree that hours, and therefore date lines and time zones are completely arbitrary though.

            If we didn’t have hours we’d still need a way to group times by geographic or political regions; my example above still needs to handle the “lightest where?” question.

            I think my conclusion is that organizing people and societies is arbitrary by nature.

            It would be neater though to try to make midnight and mid day the basis for which we measure time. Stepping off of that makes it even more arbitrary.

            • @ynthrepic@lemmy.world
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              116 days ago

              We’re not disagreeing then. I’m just saying some date lines aren’t in the right place in general, but what really matters most? What are our priorities? I don’t think most light and most dark is better, even if it were possible to get every time zone just right.

              I feel like having a life, and kids being able to play for longer after school without it being dark throughout the summer is pretty awesome.

              It’s that or have school and work finish earlier. I’m all for that, lol.

  • @bampop@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I have a taxi company. On one night, one of my drivers did two jobs, one dispatched at 00:15, the other at 00:45, and he clocked off at 02:15. How long was he working for?

    A) 1 hour

    B) 2 hours

    C) 3 hours

    D) 2 hours 30 minutes

    E) any of the above

    • @misteloct@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      American here, trick question, it’s E. Irrelevant, the driver is only paid through tips and the employer doesn’t pay payroll taxes, so his working hours are of no consequence.

    • @ragas@lemmy.ml
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      118 days ago

      A, B or C.

      D would mean that you are in a country with a half hour DST offset, in which case we would miss the option 1 hour and 30 minutes.

      • @bampop@lemmy.world
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        117 days ago

        D can also happen if the 00:45 job was before the 00:15 job, which thanks to the magic of daylight savings, is also possible

        • @ragas@lemmy.ml
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          16 days ago

          Wow, I didn’t even think of that option. Savage.

          Edit: I’m gonna steal this to annoy my coworkers.

    • @forrcaho@lemmy.world
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      118 days ago

      When I worked an hourly job on the night shift, we would all clock out to change the time and then clock back in.

  • @finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Wasn’t DST invented in America? How did it even get adopted by the EU?

    I’m also seeing that it was formerly used in Russia, India, South America, and some parts of Africa, and it is still used in 4/5ths of Canada and 1/3 of Australia.

    • El Barto
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      -118 days ago

      New Zealand entomologist George Hudson first proposed modern DST.

      Easy to google, bud. Also, the concept is ancient.

      • @finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        That guy was in 1895, which is a hundred years after Ben Franklin suggested it, but neither of them were responsible because it wasn’t adopted until the early 20th century in Canada, Germany, Austria, and the USA roughly in that order.

        • El Barto
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          418 days ago

          Well thanks. TIL.

          Having said that, “mentioning” is not inventing.

          It would be cool if we had fat burning pizza. There you have it. I mentioned it first, so I invented it.

  • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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    419 days ago

    I’ve heard a few complaints today from people irl about having to change their clocks. Not about the time change itself, but having to change the time on clocks. It took me two minutes lol.

    • Fushuan [he/him]
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      919 days ago

      I have not changed the clock for like 10 years or more. All my clocks are synchronized and the oven/microwave clock will permanently be a 00:00, I don’t have time set it every time lights go out…

  • Tomtits
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    219 days ago

    No one is complaining about when we all gain an hours sleep in Autumn

    • @Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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      2719 days ago

      I do. I can’t stand it because where I live it means I will no longer see the sun. Not to even mention how much it sucks ass from a mental standpoint to get out of work and have it be dark. I could not care less if I see a tiny bit of sunlight on my way to work lol. I’ve had multiple jobs where once ST hits, I’m going to work and coming home in darkness. I literally dont see the sun until the weekend. Imo give me whichever option that maximizes sunlight during most people’s free time.

    • @dQw4w9WgXcQ@lemm.ee
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      2319 days ago

      I have never liked it.

      As a person, I don’t like the inconsistency.

      As a developer, I don’t like to not be able to use the local time as a consistent way to order data.

      As a father, I don’t like to have to adjust a daily routine of my baby who has just reached a good 24 hour schedule.

        • @FreakinSteve@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          A rose is a rose and time is time. That “extra hour” can be taken any time you want and has nothing to do with changing a clock twice a year. You’re going to sleep however mych you want or need to regardless of this construct. Also you “lose” that hour in spring