ChatGPT Now Linked to Way More Deaths Than the Caffeinated Lemonade That Panera Pulled Off the Market in Disgrace "As of last week, ChatGPT maker OpenAI is facing a total of eight distinct lawsuits alleging that extensive use of its flagship chatbot inflicted emotional and psychological harm to users, resulting in mental breakdowns, financial instability, alienation from loved ones, and — in five cases — death by suicide."
"A sharp increase in e-waste has accompanied the surge in electronic equipment. In 2022, 62 million tons of e-waste was produced globally. Canada’s e-waste tripled between 2000 and 2019 and is expected to reach 1.2 billion kilograms by 2030. These statistics demonstrate an urgent environmental crisis that demands new ways of thinking and educating future generations."
Increasingly Big Tech will compete with food for water. Big Tech will win. The people who run Big Tech would let half the world die of thirst and see that as merely the price of progress, innovation "Rice farmers in the south were forced to stop planting rice for three years in a row, from 2021 to 2023. “Farmers say they are being sacrificed for [the] semiconductor industry, and I think that’s a fair assessment,” said Po-Jen Hsu."
AI is devouring life on earth, and it's only getting started. And for what? A tech bro scam "By 2030, the current rate of AI growth would annually put 24 to 44 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the emissions equivalent of adding 5 to 10 million cars to U.S. roadways. It would also drain 731 to 1,125 million cubic meters of water per year—equal to the annual household water usage of 6 to 10 million Americans." https://phys.org/news/2025-11-ai-centers-strain-energy-resources.html
AI power use forecast finds the industry far off track to net zero Several large tech firms that are active in AI have set goals to hit net zero by 2030, but a new forecast of the energy and water required to run large data centres shows they’re unlikely to meet those targets Net Zero was always a joke to Big Tech. They were never serious and never will be. Their growth depends on environmental destruction.
"From Chile and Mexico to Georgia in the US and Scotland, serious concerns have been raised around data centres guzzling excess water and consuming vast amounts of energy at the cost of local communities. In an energy starved, water-scarce India, these challenges are even more accentuated. According to the World Bank, India has 18% of the world's population, but only 4% of its water resources, making it among the most water-stressed countries in the world."
"The latest version of Elon Musk’s Grok AI model cost nearly $500 million to train and consumed enough energy, water, and resources to match the needs of an entire small city." "The carbon footprint of training Grok 4 reached 154,000 tons of CO₂, comparable to what a commercial Boeing airplane emits over three years of flights. Cooling the data centers and running power systems took 754 million liters of water—enough to fill around 300 Olympic-sized swimming pools."
Data centers in Ireland article I'm doing an article on the impact of data centers in Ireland. Anyone got some interesting insights or information?
"‘Degrowth’ is as clear as it gets. Definitely no less clear than ‘equality’; or ‘economic growth’ for that matter (is it growth of welfare or activity? monetised or all activity? if only monetised, why would we care?). Beyond a critique of the absurdity of perpetual growth, degrowth signifies a decrease of global carbon and material footprint, starting from the wealthy."
What are the real world implications of "aggressively" rolling out solar, wind and EVs? All over the world, the mining oligarchs are hungry and hunting. In Ireland, right now young geologists are knocking on farmers doors, saying they're doing PHDs and could they survey the land for lithium. The farmers know the game, ask for written confirmation, find out its all a ruse by multinational lithium company. In Global South, they're coming with guns and bombs to make Green Sacrifice Zones.