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#data#centers#don#local#more#power#community#center#build#less

Discussion (15 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
Personally I think it's mostly a proxy vote against bigtech/social-media. People are pretty fed up with their practices but don't have power to act at a national level. But, they DO have power at the local level to show up to town council and talk directly (in-person) to their representatives.
I think the other side of this is that there's this old idea (mostly correct) that municipalities partnering with businesses is good for the community because it brings positive side-effects: jobs, more cashflow in the local economy, etc. This is much less true for data centers. It's just a building that uses power and produces heat/by-products. Generally, employment gains are tiny compared with the old "automaker" labor model of the 1960s-1980s
People recognize this and they're not happy. They don't think it's a good deal for their communities.
Put a different way, some companies have made a lot of money with business models that hinge on victims never being able to reach a human.
Those same companies want to set up phone centers in the neighborhoods of the people they’ve neglected that also will not take their calls.
Town hall it is.
Quieter? Lower water use? Lower energy use? Mandatory accessory green spaces? Property taxes that reflect the value being derived relative to inconvenience/pain inflicted on the community? Jobs programs?
I think there's a lot of ideas to mitigate the downsides of data centers. Many of the people who don't want data centers have such proposals that are opposed by different people who don't want data centers.
It's not enough to offer incentives. You have to explain why you even need to do it in the first place, and the answer better not be "we want money."
This empowers people making them feel less beholden to rising energy prices, and gives the data center more energy for its needs as the grid is freed up.
We've been slowly boiling alive in the reality that the tech industry has long been evolving to hurt us more and help us less each year. We'd be neutral or welcoming to data centers if we didn't know that storing and processing all that data was going to be used against us.
Amazon and other companies already have job training programs because they cannot find enough skilled labor to build and operate their data centers. The number of jobs commonly cited are comically lower than what is common to operate a modern hyperscaler. In my experience, hyperscalers often have at least 100-200 people on site to operate the data center and I've seen more than 1000 people on a site when the data center is under construction.
The real issue, as always, are the local governments and utilities that sellout out the citizens and fail to create and enforce building codes. The governments should be using the demand for data centers to partner with the companies and have them pay to modernize and fix the power grid. They should be using them to help subsidize green energy initiatives among other things and fund other projects to benefit the community.
The inconvenient truth is that the problem with data centers lies with the people in the communities who continue to elect politicians who, time and time again, make decisions counter to the best interests of their community. Data centers just happen to be the latest scapegoat to distract people from corrupt politicians and an community that is not civically engaged enough to hold their politicians accountable.
Why would anyone want them?
The only thing that'd change my mind would be full communal ownership in addition to everything you've said.
If it's true that they can be constructed in space and operated remotely, then they can also be placed on container ships, on isolated ocean platforms like oil rigs, or in unpopulated areas on land.
If it's not true that they can be constructed in space, then we'd probably better stop telling ourselves that it's possible.
Maine is about to become the first state to ban major new data centers
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47708817