AI firms “ask public officials to sign non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) preventing them from sharing information with their constituents...
How is this even remotely legal? Is this even remotely legal?
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AI firms “ask public officials to sign non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) preventing them from sharing information with their constituents...
How is this even remotely legal? Is this even remotely legal?
U.S. Code 5 Section 2302 subsection (b)(13) prohibits public officers from signing NDAs that prohibit them from sharing with the law the breaking of any law.
The problem here is that who owns a data center isn't a matter of breaking the law. It's only if the data center starts breaking the law, and only then can the lawmaker share that the law is being broken and by whom. It wouldn't give them carte blanche to go out and say "Microsoft owns that land".
Sounds like Americans need to get the guillotine out for some "societal weeding"
Everything is legal if you're rich.
Also legality in the US... Lol
"Legal" doesn't mean much anymore
Regulate data centers already! Make it mandatory that they be self-powered by renewable energy. Problem solved.
The current administration will never do this but it would be nice
Idk if any previous administration would either tbh.
I choose to believe that, had data centers been a thing in FDR's time, that's how it would be
Not just data centers. Do that to everything. Find where to put a line; if you're using x% of the local power you have to pay more for power. Flip that shit so massive electric consumers are paying for everyone else.
The fact that industrial and commercial use pays lower rates than people trying to live their lives and heat their home is such bullshit.
It's logical, he who has the power makes others pay for him.
I mean, you do realize, of course, that due to effects of scale the current situation is putting smaller pressure on industrial consumers than on home consumers.
But all the talk about demanding to regulate - that's not how you change anything. It's like trying to fix a wall with an A4 sheet of printer paper. Yes, it's something with the correct topology. No, it won't do.
You need to grow an industry that puts the balancing pressure. That's what we all should be thinking about, something that grows power and feeds people, that is in its interest opposed to these things we don't like.
That’s how you make American manufacturing even more prohibitively expensive than it already is.
If there's not enough power to run a manufacturing plant without impacting residents, then the generation needs to be expanded before anything can be built anyway.
Luckily renewable energy is the cheapest form of new electricity to build. I see no problem with making new manufacturing plants build/pay for their own power generation as well. The cost of installation is probably a tiny fraction of the cost of the actual manufacturing equipment or GPUs if it's an AI data center.
US Government: "Best we can do is fuck all of you."
That has the added benefit of helping the grid when the bubble pops.
The average utility bill for Pacific Gas and Electric Co. customers increased by about 67% over the last five years. (source)
I can vouch. My PG&E bills in 2020 averaged around $70 a month, now they’re regularly over $170. No change in my consumption habits. If I’m mathing correctly, that’s more than a 100% increase for me.
i noticed my parents bill water/electricity also increased we have pg&e too.
There are some other things that have happened over the same time period.
Newsome owned PG&E shares the whole time.
Shady ways? What Shady ways? They are BLATANTLY doing it.
The article clearly outlines the shady ways.
Nuance is lost here pal. My point is although they use shady ways, Republicans are allowing big tech to freely abuse utilities without paying their fair share and Democrats haven't exactly pushed back either.
but, you know, once they get those nuclear reactors up and running, that will all go away...right?
<impoverished Georgia Power ratepayer noises>
Georgia still has among the lowest per-kWh tariffs in the country, at $0.086/kWh (0.0806 in winter). Plus $14/month service charge and 20% taxes & fees. Compare California at $0.40/kWh.
Oh good, so long as the increasing utility bills stay under some arbitrarily-decided threshold, the rising costs are just fine, actually.
Massive inflation impacts utility companies the same as everyone else. Thanks Republicans.
Senators count the shady ways data centers pass energy costs on to Americans
... Well how many have they counted?
What's the number?
69
355÷113