The computing power for AI models requires immense – and increasing – amounts of natural resources. Legislation is required to prevent environmental crisis
One of the most pernicious myths about digital technology is that it is somehow weightless or immaterial. Remember all that early talk about the “paperless” office and “frictionless” transactions? And of course, while our personal electronic devices do use some electricity, compared with the washing machine or the dishwasher, it’s trivial.
Belief in this comforting story, however, might not survive an encounter with Kate Crawford’s seminal book, Atlas of AI, or the striking Anatomy of an AI System graphic she composed with Vladan Joler. And it certainly wouldn’t survive a visit to a datacentre – one of those enormous metallic sheds housing tens or even hundreds of thousands of servers humming away, consuming massive amounts of electricity and needing lots of water for their cooling systems.
More Stories
Exercise ‘better than drugs’ to stop cancer returning after treatment, trial finds
New AI test can predict which men will benefit from prostate cancer drug
Elon Musk shows he still has the White House’s ear on Trump’s Middle East trip