World News
A community for discussing events around the World
Rules:
-
Rule 1: posts have the following requirements:
- Post news articles only
- Video links are NOT articles and will be removed.
- Title must match the article headline
- Not United States Internal News
- Recent (Past 30 Days)
- Screenshots/links to other social media sites (Twitter/X/Facebook/Youtube/reddit, etc.) are explicitly forbidden, as are link shorteners.
-
Rule 2: Do not copy the entire article into your post. The key points in 1-2 paragraphs is allowed (even encouraged!), but large segments of articles posted in the body will result in the post being removed. If you have to stop and think "Is this fair use?", it probably isn't. Archive links, especially the ones created on link submission, are absolutely allowed but those that avoid paywalls are not.
-
Rule 3: Opinions articles, or Articles based on misinformation/propaganda may be removed.
-
Rule 4: Posts or comments that are homophobic, transphobic, racist, sexist, anti-religious, or ableist will be removed. “Ironic” prejudice is just prejudiced.
-
Posts and comments must abide by the lemmy.world terms of service UPDATED AS OF OCTOBER 19 2025
-
Rule 5: Keep it civil. It's OK to say the subject of an article is behaving like a (pejorative, pejorative). It's NOT OK to say another USER is (pejorative). Strong language is fine, just not directed at other members. Engage in good-faith and with respect! This includes accusing another user of being a bot or paid actor. Trolling is uncivil and is grounds for removal and/or a community ban.
Similarly, if you see posts along these lines, do not engage. Report them, block them, and live a happier life than they do. We see too many slapfights that boil down to "Mom! He's bugging me!" and "I'm not touching you!" Going forward, slapfights will result in removed comments and temp bans to cool off.
-
Rule 6: Memes, spam, other low effort posting, reposts, misinformation, advocating violence, off-topic, trolling, offensive, regarding the moderators or meta in content may be removed at any time.
-
Rule 7: We didn't USED to need a rule about how many posts one could make in a day, then someone posted NINETEEN articles in a single day. Not comments, FULL ARTICLES. If you're posting more than say, 10 or so, consider going outside and touching grass. We reserve the right to limit over-posting so a single user does not dominate the front page.
We ask that the users report any comment or post that violate the rules, to use critical thinking when reading, posting or commenting. Users that post off-topic spam, advocate violence, have multiple comments or posts removed, weaponize reports or violate the code of conduct will be banned.
All posts and comments will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis. This means that some content that violates the rules may be allowed, while other content that does not violate the rules may be removed. The moderators retain the right to remove any content and ban users.
Lemmy World Partners
News !news@lemmy.world
Politics !politics@lemmy.world
World Politics !globalpolitics@lemmy.world
Recommendations
For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
view the rest of the comments
The AI data centers have purpose-built racks to let like 10x more power through. A single rack for the newer ones is in the range of 100kW, but there's talk of planning for even more power density for future generations - I've heard of 600 kW racks and potentially 1MW racks. Your average normal data center isn't equipped with enough cooling to run a significant amount of them, nor are they wired for that kind of power unless built very recently. Just 3 years ago, the GPUs used in data centers were much less power hungry (~400W per chip then vs over 1kW per chip now).
It also doesn't make sense to run just a few GPU racks in one data center, a few in another, etc for running frontier models. They benefit too much from low latency, high bandwidth interconnects.
There are for sure many data centers in Europe that can run modest sized LLMs, no problem. Probably even train them. But we don't have many data centers that would make it economical to run frontier models. AFAIK there's one in Norway that OpenAI uses, and Anthropic doesn't have consumer-facing compute at all in Europe (Not sure if enterprise clients can get a special deal).
New AI datacenters are being built in the gigawatt scale. It's a truly disgusting amount of power, my entire country peaks at under 2 GW in even the coldest winters.
If there was any efficient way to run frontier models in general-purpose data centers, you bet OpenAI and Anthropic would be doing it en masse. Anthropic in particular is starved for compute, that's why they enacted much stricter usage limits a few months ago. Plus they'd definitely benefit from lower latency, as inference itself takes time and you want the user to start getting output as soon as possible so they'd perceive the service as more responsive.
So sure, we can run AI workloads in Europe. Hell, I've run LLMs on my low-end PC. Mistral uses American cloud companies' European GPU compute capabilities. But they have much smaller models than GPT 5.whatever they're up to now or Claude Opus.