News

Curious who owns Nothing Technology? Learn about the company’s founder, its investors, and whether its products are worth ...
A $25 million land acquisition by Australian mining company Santana Minerals has reignited community concerns over the ...
With Phone (3), the LED arrangement is substituted with Glyph Matrix, a circle-shaped second screen in the top right-hand ...
Benson Boone is hitting the road in support of his upcoming album, American Heart, which is out on June 20. Tour attendees can expect to hear some of his hits, including his breakout track “Beautiful ...
The Buy Nothing Project is a global movement of community-based groups who donate, lend, recycle, and share items among one another to reduce consumption and the amount of waste that ends up in ...
There are more than 100 Buy Nothing groups across the city and more than 120,000 worldwide — and most follow rules set by a loosely organized national entity, the Buy Nothing Project.
The Buy Nothing Project, says 1.6 million people around the world have downloaded its app since the project launched in Washington state in 2013.
Published: November 3, 2024 2:06pm EST Buy Nothing Project co-founder Rebecca Rockefeller talks about its origins. The cost-of-living crisis has spurred on the global growth of Buy Nothing groups.
These are some of the things I've given away to members of my local Buy Nothing Facebook group. For the uninitiated, Buy Nothing is part of a project for people to give away unwanted items.
A grassroots community movement The official Buy Nothing Project began in 2013 as a Facebook group for neighbors in Bainbridge Island, Washington.
The Buy Nothing Project offers people a way to give and receive, share and lend through a worldwide network of reuse and gift economies. The idea is to give items away rather than throwing them away.