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kyledrake an hour ago

A lot of people run production, non-AI servers out of New York data centers. This will be a serious problem for a lot of people, including smaller companies, when they can't expand capacity in New York anymore and prices for what's left start going through the roof. It's not always easy to move servers to other data centers, not everything is an eventually consistent database.

embedding-shape an hour ago | parent | next [-]

Are you one of them? The other side of the issue is "raising power costs, straining water supplies and burdening local communities" according to the article. I guess the crux is figuring out who would suffer the most, data center expanders/builders, or the local community? If the latter, then this move seems right from my point of view, but I'm also not building/managing data centers.

I think it's reasonable to pump the brakes for a year (which is what they've done) and then see where things are in a year, even when there is just a risk to the local community. Worst case scenario, those businesses and data centers end up one year behind schedule, compared to the downsides, that seems acceptable to me.

otterley an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It only applies to DCs > 50MW.

xyst 19 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

Should read the article before spouting off FUD

> One-year construction ban will apply to data centers using 50 megawatts or more, official says

This is targeting "hyperscalers" or AI dcs. Non-AI datacenters consume well below this threshold.