| ▲ | inglor_cz 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||
"But why would you?" Because the permitting process is much easier and there are way, way fewer authorities that can potentially shut you down. I think this is the entire difference. Space is very, very lightly regulated, especially when it comes to labor, construction and environmental law. You need to be able to launch from somewhere and you need to automate a lot of things. But once you can do this, you escaped all but a few authorities that would hold power over you down on Earth. No one will be able to complain that your data center is taking their water or making their electricity more expensive, for example. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | oivey an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
The satellite is built on Earth, so I’m not sure how it dodges any of those regulations practically. Why not just build a fully autonomous, solar powered datacenter on Earth? I guess in space Elon might think that no one can ban Grok for distributing CSAM? There’s some truly magical thinking behind the idea that government regulations have somehow made it cheaper to launch a rocket than build a building. Rockets are fantastically expensive even with the major leaps SpaceX made and will be even with Starship. Everything about a space launch is expensive, dangerous, and highly regulated. Your datacenter on Earth can’t go boom. | ||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | plorg an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
So it's a Zone in search of a use case? | ||||||||||||||