So, there’s a piece in Jacobin arguing that data center moratoria are a “terrible idea” making the rounds on social media and beyond. It’s pretty easy to see why this makes for some good discourse; naturally, there’s going to be frisson among AI optimists when a perceived opponent—here, the nation’s most influential socialist magazine—makes a case for aligning with the tech industry’s goals.

While I’m pretty unconvinced on all but one or two of the points that the piece itself raises, and I think it seriously misconstrues the class politics of data center fights, I do think it’s worth litigating this idea. Because I do believe we should be thinking about what a broader and more engaged politics of resisting, regulating, and ultimately governing AI might look like. It’s a good occasion, in other words, to ask:

  • Who is fighting data centers?
  • Why are they fighting them?
  • Are anti-data center movements a dead end—or a starting point?
  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    which can be heard for hundreds of feet around them

    From that linked article.

    Hundreds of feet!

    They aren’t building these 50 feet from residential properties. I don’t think this is an actual issue.