• @Catoblepas
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    63 months ago

    And the power draw is only an issue if we decide to not fix where the grid gets its power from.

    So it is and remains an unavoidable problem with frivolous AI use for the foreseeable future?

    • @IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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      23 months ago

      No, because there are already locations in the world where clean grids exist. Focusing on AI use as an environmental problem is not helpful. Focus on the source of the energy, not it’s uses.

      • @Catoblepas
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        53 months ago

        How many AI data centers are in the countries that have clean grids, as opposed to the US?

        “Please don’t pay attention to the gorilla setting the house on fire, just give the gorilla a better source of fuel.”

      • @calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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        23 months ago

        If you place a data center in a 100% green location, then you’re reducing the supply of 100% energy, so everything else has to consume less green energy. Therefore, by using 100% green energy you just increased your carbon footprint.

        Green energy, like all resources, is limited. If you waste it on a glorified food predictor you can’t use it on a electric harvester that will feed the people.

        Even if you want to avoid this problem and create your own green power plant for your own data center (creating the green supply and demand at the same time), you are still spending green energy resources (rare metals and manufacturing capacity) that went into creating your powerplant instead of creating a powerplant for electric harvesters.

        There’s no way around it. Misusing electricity is accelerating climate change, one way or another. Even if the energy you are misusing is 100% green.