▲ | camillomiller 16 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
AI is not a fundamental physical element. AI is mostly closed and controlled by people who will inevitably use it to further their power and centralize wealth and control. We acted with this in mind to make electricity a publicly controlled service. There is absolutely no intention nor political strength around to do this with AI in the West. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | ben_w 16 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
There's a few levels of this: • That it is software means that any given model can be easily ordered nationalised or whatever. • Everyone quickly copying OpenAI, and specifically DeepSeek more recently, showed that once people know what kind of things actually work, it's not too hard to replicate it. • We've only got a handful of ideas about how to align* AI with any specific goal or value, and a lot of ways it does go wrong. So even if every model was put into public ownership, it's not going to help, not yet. That said, if the goal is to give everyone access to an AI that demands 375 W/capita 24/7, means the new servers double the global demand for electricity, with all that entails. * Last I heard (a while back now so may have changed): if you have two models, there isn't even a way to rank them as more-or-less aligned vs. anything. Despite all the active research in this area, we're all just vibing alignment, corporate interests included. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | TeMPOraL 16 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Electricity here is meant as a technology (or a set of technologies) exploiting a particular physical phenomenon - not the phenomenon itself. (If it were the latter, then you could argue everything uses electricity if it relies in any way on matter being solid, because AFAIK the furthest we got on the question of "why I don't fall through the chair I'm sitting on" is.... "electromagnetism".) | |||||||||||||||||
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