Like it, or not. It will likely take legislation to change this.
Sure, that's how the standby power problems were solved as well.
But first, the enthusiasts, hobbyists, and ordinary users must realize and understand the situation.
Then it may become a political issue, and as it is such a simple thing, it may go through quite rapidly, just as the standby power stuff did.
The only reason legislation was necessary, was because the companies and their EEs didn't want to spend the extra to produce devices users wanted. Think about that for a second, when rereading the comments in this thread.
Like I said, this kind of step forward is not new; it has happened dozens of times in the last two centuries already, and will happen again.
What is important, is someone like Dave making these easily understood videos so more people realize this is an issue.
(And my USB-to-3.3V thing is related, so I'm hoping Dave or one of the other youtubers with EE design experience could show how the same applies to current 3.3V USB gadgets, and how hobbyists can avoid that pitfall.)
Let me elaborate a little.
I have an Odroid-HC1 that I'd like to use as an LTE firewall, with a Huawei ME909s-120 LTE modem (a real modem, not an embedded Linux system!) as the uplink. The modem is one of many modules that use a miniPCIe interface -- or, actually just the USB and SIM card pins on the interface. These modems run on 3.3V, and tend to be a bit power-hungry: the average current consumption of this one is only 200mA, but it can be a bit spikey. (Older 3G/4G/LTE modems and dongles, like the ZTE 823 embedded USB model I also have, is very power-hungry, but I'm not exactly sure of its consumption as it has been in continuous use for over a year already.)
MiniPCIe-WWAN adapters (an USB connector and a SIM card slot, connecting to such a module via MiniPCIe; most modules have very good support in Linux with ModemManager -- in my case, plug-and-play) are easy to obtain at e.g. Ebay, and there are even companies making their own for use in ad displays, indoor advertisements, et cetera, but they all have the same issue: they use an LDO to drop the 5V to the required 3.3V, and the waste heat is wreaking havoc with the enclosures. (I even know of a Finnish company that is having this issue with this in their own designs, having observed the change in LDO to one with a serious heatsink on it!)
I now have four of these adapters (plus one either in, or lost in the mail). Only one has a reasonable step-down DC-DC converter, a Silergy SY8009B (in SOT23-6). It's not bad for this particular application, as it is 90% efficient at the nominal 200mA (5V to 3.3V), and can do 2A max, but the datasheet doesn't even list the recommended inductor values, so I am quite suspicious of it.
In fact, I am considering making my own. Which is, given my level of competence in these matters, rather ridiculous. And that just shows how too stuck to their ways most EEs designing these jellybean modules are, not considering the issues Dave highlighted here -- and the issues like nasty waste heat due to silly component selection causing real use risks. And that is why this kind of videos -- showing the issue in plain terms, then a few suggestions on how to do better -- are so good:
it is food for thought. That thought leads to better designs and wider understanding of the issue, and may lead to the legislation that eventually enforces the change, as it did with wasteful standby power a decade or two ago in most Western countries.
(And lots of traps for us new players, too. Which is why I'm going slow and careful, trying to work out the reasonable design, before I commit to testing it in real life, risking my 60€ modem.)
The point BigClive makes about apparent power -- that eventually, we will be charged by apparent power use, instead of the actual power use --, is simply a continuation of the same trajectory. It is just much further in the future; I'd say a decade at least, perhaps two, but it will come.
It would be interesting to see what kind of a circuit you could use
right now to create a LED light with a reasonable (say, 0.95 or higher) power factor, and how much it would cost.
Or, better yet, how much a 2.4A (12 watt) USB charger would cost, if it had efficient components and actual power factor correction. You know: useful information, food for thought.