Data Centers Push Back On US Efficiency Rules 134
alphadogg writes "Data center executives from Google and other large companies are pushing back against new efficiency requirements proposed by a prominent standards group, saying they are too 'prescriptive' and don't leave them room to innovate. 'This standard defines the energy efficiency for most types of buildings in America and is often incorporated into building codes across the country,' Urs Hoelzle, Google senior vice president for operations, wrote in a post on the Google blog. Data centers are among the fastest-growing users of energy, and setting efficiency standards for them is a welcome step, he said. But he called the requirements 'too prescriptive.' Instead of setting efficiency targets and letting engineers decide how they can best meet them, the amendments specify types of cooling systems that companies should use."
What does he mean by "prescriptive"? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:What does he mean by "prescriptive"? (Score:5, Insightful)
No, you're completely wrong because the analogy doesn't work. Browsers need to support specific codecs for so that video encoders know how to encode video. Videos take up lots of space and require lots of CPU cycles to encode. If I know all of my clients support H.264 then I can encode video once and have it only take up space once on my server's hard drive. I shouldn't have to create and store H.264, Ogg Theora, MPEG2, and MJPEG versions just because every different browser chose their own format to support.
This is the same reason that browsers need to support specific image file formats. I remember when not all browsers supported JPEG (GIF and XBM were the only image formats most browsers supported), so web sites needed to have GIF fallback images. Some browsers partially supported JPEGs and opened them with a separate graphic viewer in another window. Of course there's nothing that says your browser can't support TIFF and BMP, but it damn well better support GIF, PNG, and JPEG.
But saying that you must use economizers isn't like saying you must use H.264; it's like saying that you must use SSE2 CPU instructions to decode H.264 streams. What if newer SSE4 instructions make it go faster? What if you don't even have an x86 chip in your device? Who cares how you decode the stream as long as you can make it show up without skipping frames?
So Urs was right, you were wrong.
dom
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No, you're completely wrong because the analogy doesn't work. Browsers need to support specific codecs for so that video encoders know how to encode video. Videos take up lots of space and require lots of CPU cycles to encode. If I know all of my clients support H.264 then I can encode video once and have it only take up space once on my server's hard drive. I shouldn't have to create and store H.264, Ogg Theora, MPEG2, and MJPEG versions just because every different browser chose their own format to support.
While it is a valid argument for having a certain baseline codec that everyone supports, it does not preclude having an extensible codec system.
For example, Opera 10.5 uses GStreamer on all platforms, which ships with a Theora codec - but you can extend it as you see fit.
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I shouldn't have to create and store H.264, Ogg Theora, MPEG2, and MJPEG versions just because every different browser chose their own format to support.
I suppose you could always try to solve codec support the same way Root CA's get into browsers.
Company A pays browser maker X large sums of money to include support for codec N.
Web sites B, C, D, and F license codec N from company A to produce content encoded with said codec.
Not that such a business model would actually work, but perhaps if it did, Google would just buy off all the browsers and open source their codec with no royalty fees, perhaps.
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I'm in full agreement with Mr. Hoelzle, and I think that anyone who truly believes in limited government would as well.
Hmm, so your opinion about this is motivated, not by reference to the practical reality, but to ideology?
Words can be very strange things at times - I don't see any ambiguity in the word prescriptive; it simply means that they don't like the government to tell them to save energy. I'm much more worried about words like "innovation" - as well as your use of the word "limited".
"Innovation": it looks like such an innocent and positive word, almost like "invention"; however, as far as I can see, where "inventio
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your opinion about this is motivated, not by reference to the practical reality, but to ideology?
Yes. To tackle any problem, pragmatism is always driven by some sort of philosophy.
How can it not be?
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s/driven/tempered/;
s/word/word (Score:2)
s/word/word
Is that a RegEx or something like that? Like
$foo = "driven";
$bar = RegEx("s/driven/tempered/");
Printf($bar);
Is my pseudocode gonna print "tempered"?
:P
Totally offtopic, but I'm curious cause I see it in IRC all the time and I asked once but I don't think anyone was listening
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Its not exactly regex. Its ed syntax (also used by sed and vi, amongst many other things)... a very basic form.
Think "command/parameters" where command is "s" (substitute) and parameters will be in the form "from/to"
A lot of common regex parsers use much of the same root syntax that ed does, but ed commands build from there to create modifications based on those patterns.
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"Instead of setting efficiency targets and letting engineers decide how they can best meet them, the amendments specify types of cooling systems that companies should use
So prescriptive means they don't like the government telling them HOW to save energy.
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If you had read the last sentence of the summary, let alone the article, you would know your conclusion is false. Also, the definition of what "prescriptive" means depends on the context. Were it not for the context that states the government is reasonable in demanding energy efficiency but unreasonable in prescribing exactly what measures are required to achieve that efficienc
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I don't see any ambiguity in the word prescriptive; it simply means that they don't like the government to tell them to save energy.
And this is your first mistake. In this case it is not that they dislike the government telling them to save energy. It is that they dislike the government saying you must do process Z using X type of equipment because "it is more energy efficient". Their fear with this type of regulation is that if they find a way to do Z using Y type of equipment that is more efficient than X, the standard won't let them.
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I made the argument a couple days ago that video codecs should not be directly supported in browsers.
Entirely different. Given the strong network effects in video codecs, a de facto standard will emerge: at the moment its flv, and widespread usage will be more important that its actual merits. The market does not work well.
Also, direct browser support of one codec does not prevent browser, or plugin, support of another. Browsers handle multiple image formats fine.
In this case, it sounds like the regulation is too heavy. There are no network effects, and mandating one technology may prevent the use of other
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I made the argument a couple days ago that video codecs should not be directly supported in browsers.
Entirely different. Given the strong network effects in video codecs, a de facto standard will emerge: at the moment its flv, and widespread usage will be more important that its actual merits. The market does not work well.
The large number and difficulty obtaining the various has set digital video back by years - pick one and everyone standardise to it...even if it is bad at least everyone will be able to view it.
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Re:What does he mean by "prescriptive"? (Score:5, Insightful)
This was NOT mandated by the "government", it's a proposed standard from The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, a PRIVATE society.
What Google and others fear is that eventually regulators can use those standards. The government has done *nothing* yet, so you can save the bogeyman for another story.
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ASHRAE's standard 90.1, as well as most energy codes, allows for compliance by meeting either with a "prescriptive" standard or a "performance" standard - your choice.
The prescriptive standard is simpler to design to because it requires specific things to be done, like to use water-side or air-side economizers, rather than requiring you to prove a result. The performance standard
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This is in stark contrast to both Google and Yahoo's claims that "to comply
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I made the argument a couple days ago that video codecs should not be directly supported in browsers. The market must be able to innovate, and by forcing specific technologies, the playing field is narrowed and users are ultimately hurt by such prescriptive actions.
So, the reason that you don't like this one unrelated innovation (browser video codec support) is that... there must be room to innovate? What are you talking about?
Wait, are you saying that guy made a bad analogy [slashdot.org]?
probably pushing external agenda (Score:3, Insightful)
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Brand XYZ better watch out, Apple is probably already drawing up the lawsuit.
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There are way too many manufacturers of economizers for that to be a reason. I would be surprised if there is a manufacturer of HVAC equipment that doesn't make them. It's basically just a box with a few (usually two) dampers on it, fairly simple.
I wouldn't be surprised if the reason for the objection is not the economizer requirement, but rather either a move to delay the new version of the standard so they have longer before they have to comply with what I would guess are more expensive requirements to
mod parent up (Score:2)
I'm not sure (Score:4, Insightful)
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1) One might want to specifically not encourage certain approaches if they had other negative results (we'd certainly feel that way about a process that improves building insulation using the flesh of newborn babies).
That is very simple to do with a blacklist. And that's how the legislation should have been done. Set the target, blacklist what should not be used. In fact, no need to blacklist, there is already regulation that will deal with most of the problematic solutions, just put some working that reminds people that the other guidelines and regulations are still effective. If there is a need, blacklist some other small stuff. But never whitelist.
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If there is a need, blacklist some other small stuff. But never whitelist
These building regulations have to be passed into law on a State by State basis.
Trying to blacklist stuff is like playing the same game of whack-a-mole 50 times over.
I'm not saying that a whitelist is the best way to deal with this situation,
but "never whitelist" is a stupid way to do public policy.
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Okay. "Never whitelist" is probably overkill. But whitelists should only *only* be used when there are fixed number of allowed behaviors and no significant new behaviors are likely to ever exist. For example, a whitelist prescribing the way in which execute people is probably reasonable; there might be new ways to kill people, but we wouldn't want to adopt them right away, and they're not likely to be materially different anyway. But that sort of legislation is so infrequent that it's hardly worth arguing t
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"This is not exactly a new idea; it's fundamental to US legislation, beginning with the US Constitution: the powers granted to the government are whitelisted, while the powers reserved by the people have no such limitations."
This is one of the least observed mandates from the constitution writers for the last 20 or more years. Our federal government has far exceeded it's original scope of power and authority. It's time for a real and substantial change in the OTHER direction.
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Trying to blacklist stuff is like playing the same game of whack-a-mole 50 times over.
Many municipalities, counties, etc. have their own codes, so it's more like several thousand whack-a-moles. That's why natioanl standards like this are helpful - when adopted locally, they reduce the number of (often irrational) regulations out there.
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And that's how the legislation should have been done
What legislation?
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Building codes are often standardized because being standardized is itself a safety benefit. If the wiring is using Standard X, the government knows that standard was vetted, its building inspectors know what that standard is supposed to require and know how to look for common failures to meet it, there is a lot of testing of best practices, etc.
But here we're talking about an efficiency measure, not a safety one, and it's not clear to me that there's any inherent value in standardization, unless it somehow
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My First though was along the lines of "Which suppliers and/or patent holders stand to benefit from this?"
see: "clean coal", ethanol).
Together with a whole host of other "green" ideas which have not been though through long term (or for that matter blatant fra
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Energy Star gives stars to the top percentage of devices (say, 10%, but I'm not sure). So, if you can get a category defined that's you and only you, then you control it. Say you get the 48.6" to 48.9" widescreen LCD TV range defined as a single category. Then you make one each of 9 models that are purposefully horribly inefficient, and submit those results to the EPA, then make one that's much worse than the industry average (and ob
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The solution if to prohibit the negative results. For your example, by prohibiting murder and grievous bodily harm, you automatically also prohibit the use of newborn babies' flesh as insulation.
Unlike many environments, data centers tend to be well instrumented for exactly the sorts of measurements needed. They tend to know exactly how much power is used and for what purpose.
PUE? (Score:2)
Everyone has a PUE? It's a rating by which you determine your efficiency.
I was talking with one engineer who had designed some interesting storage units. He was like yeah, in theory, it has a PUE of 1. Uhhh... you mean no cooling costs? He said, "Precisely."
It actually uses a very novel method of cooling, but they never went into production to my knowledge.
This is precisely what they were referring to in terms of too prescriptive in requirements. Through some innovation in varying scales you can produce som
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Is there some other agenda here? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know about you, but I've become somewhat jaded when it comes to standards like these. Usually, there's one or more parties who stand to gain financially if the standards are implemented (naturally). But when those who benefit are those that impose the standards themselves, doesn't it become somewhat of a slippery slope?
Where I work, there was this company XXX who was touting some kind of solution to protect mobile phone users; if your phone is stolen, and you report it to the operator, there was some mechanism in place that would lock the phone when it was powered up. This could be done because each phone has a unique identifier, kind of like a MAC address. Problem was, the technical platform was supposedly half-baked and too pricey, so many of the operators rejected it. But then, they got the idea to approach the government - and lo and behold, the powers-that-be came up with some regulation and standards that all operators had to comply to. Best of all -- we had to use Company XXX's technology!
So the question is -- do the members (or more likely, ASHRAE's Technical Committee members) stand to gain financially by implementing this? I would think so, since ASHRAE's made up of persons in the HVAC and other related fields. Members will gain access to "many opportunities to participate in the development of that technology [ashrae.org]"
The truth is... (Score:5, Funny)
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...Google just wants to continue using the chilled blood of babies to cool their data centers.
Are you aware of how amazingly efficient chilled baby blood is at cooling data centers? We have to protect innovation like that!
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Google just wants to continue using the chilled blood of babies to cool their data centers.
As far as hemocoolants go, this guy's blood would probably work better. [bbc.co.uk]
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Of course (Score:2)
Being green is good except for whenever **I** have to do it!
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Auto headlamps. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Why would the shape and diameter of the headlamp affect the possible bulb technology and fluting of the lamp?
The only effect of this that I have seen is that auto lamps now cost $200 - $500 to replace instead of $20 at your local auto supply shop, due to each make having an individual design.
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Was that the bulb or the whole lamp?
To previous poster: As far as beam spread is concerned, proper fluting has provided a more than adequate range for my needs.
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Where do you buy your headlights? I just replaced a headlight on my wife's car. It cost $14. So either you are shopping at a high end auto shop or you are driving a high end car...or you are talking out of your a**. And yes, the headlight I bought was specific for the make of my wife's car.
A headlight lamp (what you are talking about) is only part of a composite headlight, which is what I'm sure he's talking about. But you did NOT repeat NOT replace a headlight, you replaced a lamp. Or well, you may have replaced a whole headlight, if it was some of the old school stuff we're talking about here, which we call a sealed beam design — the headlight is the lamp, and vice versa, with the entire reflector and lens included with every lamp purchase. During the time period we're discussing, you
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Even with your example, we are still talking $65 vs the OP's estimate of $200-$400.
Half of the point of my comment was a definition of terms. The other half was that my pickup's headlights are some of the cheapest I have ever seen. A single composite headlight can run as much as a thousand dollars from the dealer, on the latest, greatest, masturbatest luxury vehicles. Even to just buy the Bosch glass/metal headlights for my old Mercedes (meaning, the design and jigs are old, and now they just keep turning them out) is about $1200, and they only have two lamps. Some vehicles now have three
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For example, the British government used to tax vehicles based on engine bore size only. [wikipedia.org] This resulted in engines with small bore sizes and relatively large strokes.
I work in diesel engines. The government is increasingly pushing to mandate specific [wikipedia.org] emissions [wikipedia.org] technol
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This is a common problem (Score:2)
Economizers not always usable (Score:3, Interesting)
These economizers that are being referenced are not always usable. They effectively circulate outside air into the data center. When the outside air is too hot, they can't be used. Also, when the outside air has too many pollutants, they can't be used. The cost of having them makes little sense when their usability is low. Other systems could make better use of the investment.
This is definitely a case where goals, not methods, should be prescribed.
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you will be bringing in some outside air anyways. As a data center is considered an occupied space, it needs to meet the minimum outside air requirements. The economizer just by passes any sort of heat exchanger. so if your OA is cooler than your RA you open the economizer. even if you need to cool it farther, at least you didn't warm it up.
You know of a data center that is 100% recirculated air? better not have people in it then.
"Power to the People" (Score:2)
Google has it easy Towns bend over backwards to get them to build and locate within their locality. With that being said the tax payers are often stiffed with the "perks" and "Abatement's" that are guaranteed to Google and one of them is usually always the huge cost of power utility and infrastructure that Google doesn't necessarily absorb. With that said, Google should be responsive to the local government and regulatory committees and not be so defensive to them. Its ok to say "bad idea", its okay to say
Asbestos (Score:1)
The building codes are necessarily formulaic in that a high-school graduate building inspector in a small town needs to be able to evaluate if a given structure is being correctly constru
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Typically, the way that this is resolved in code is that the code will dictate requirements. Shortly after the code is updated, one or more people will submit various details to the city (or whatever org owns the code) to confirm that they meet code. Sometimes the city will do this itself. Once "blessed", they may be incorporated by reference as standard details, and the reviewer/contractor/engineer/etc all know that that part has been independently verified to meet code when used in the manner for which
The goal is control, not results (Score:1)
But he called the requirements 'too prescriptive.' Instead of setting efficiency targets and letting engineers decide how they can best meet them, the amendments specify types of cooling systems that companies should use."
This makes perfect sense if:
* the government is fucking stupid
* the government wants to control you
Because if the legislation merely specified the end state (X reduction in Y), then more and smarter people would be able to find granular and custom solutions, it would be in their best inter
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This standard does not require you to use specific products or technologies. It does have a "prescriptive" compliance section, which is easier to follow and meet. It does also have "performance" sections which allow you to do whatever you want as long as you meet the efficiency goals.
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First, name something that isn't a limited resource. Here's a hint: there is not such thing. Given that fact and your reasoning above I must conclude that you support government-imposed quotas on all resources.
Second, why are quotas the only reasonable way to control usage? The parent clearly allowed for governmental intervention to adjust the price of resources to reflect costs not otherwise represented in the traditional market value of those resources. Couldn't that system work to achieve the same goals
Re:It's not the government's business... (Score:5, Insightful)
First, name something that isn't a limited resource.
Human stupidity.
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First, name something that isn't a limited resource.
Sunlight. At least it isn't a limited resource with regard to the human specie's lifetime. That's right, I'm favoring the extinction of humans prior to the the earth being engulfed by the sun as it turns into a red giant in 4 billion years.
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sunlight is certainly a limited resource. measuring over the life of the sun is meaningless if the people doing the measurement won't exist that long. Rather measure the amount of sunlight captured per square meter by say a solar panel or a tree and you will certainly find a limit. even measure all of the sunlight falling on earth during a day, huge for sure, but certainly finite in a reasonable sense.
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sunlight is certainly a limited resource. measuring over the life of the sun is meaningless if the people doing the measurement won't exist that long. Rather measure the amount of sunlight captured per square meter by say a solar panel or a tree and you will certainly find a limit. even measure all of the sunlight falling on earth during a day, huge for sure, but certainly finite in a reasonable sense.
But sunlight is infinite in the "renewable" sense: There will not come a day when you have used up all the sunlight. There is a point where you've cut down all the trees or mined out all the ore. Not with sunlight, that never ends (Ragnarok aside).
Now if you want to be reasonable, you'll have to agree to discuss the same definition of "finite", because there certainly is a limit to the amount of sunlight you can measure in a day or a space, but there is no end to the measurements themselves, you can keep ma
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You get some magical scale of CO2 per year based on some hidden, floating 'average' of your peers.
Beyond that you are made an "Offer You Can't Refuse".
Try and ride it out, you will feel the full force of the new EPA and have a eco rent a mob at your HQ.
The flip side to this? Is the US server industry riding 'rust belt' server tech for every last cycle they can?
Does better cooling tech exist on the o
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First, name something that isn't a limited resource.
Stupidity.
Now if only we could generate power from it...
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First, name something that isn't a limited resource.
Seawater.
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Everything is limited, but the actual limits are so large as to be practically non-existent. Of course in pragmatic terms, the vast majority of everything is well out of our reach, but it does exist.
This reply has no real purpose to the conversation, by the way, so don't bother rebutting me. I am, after all, technically correct.
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the exception is here, it's the large companies that are paying, and there's a difference in-between $40petrol a week and a 4 million dollar power bill.
if you want to reference it to cars - putting laws on the petrol use of cars would be like putting laws on how much power an individual computer is use - it's still apples and oranges
They have a rather large incentive to get their power bills down, and it's one of the area's where putting people working on it full will still provide a profit, and positive p
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The car analogy is relevant to a point.
However, computers and data centers are not cars. Technologies that artificially restrict things may be very harmful in the long run. For example, virtualization. Each physical machine is using more energy because of the added load of VMs, but because one physical box has replaced 1+ hardware machines with a VM, this means that a machine that is consuming 1000 watts of electricity is better than two running at 750. If someone places some arbitrary requirement that
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By the way, at least here in Finland high taxes were not originally added to fuel (and new cars) because of covering externalities, but to control trade balance. All fuel and cars were imported, and there was a fear that trade deficit would follow unless imports were not kept low by keeping the prices artificially high to consumers.
Of course after having high taxes on fuel they cannot be easily decreased, because then the government would have to raise other taxes or reduce spending... But it is nice that t
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Thought experiment about cars: if the goal is increased mileage, which would be more effective back in the 1970s:
(a) Federal government sets fleet efficiency standards for manufacturers to meet & defines a standard measuring process
(b) Federal government mandates all new cars have 1-barrel carburetors
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Monopolies unfairly remove competition in the absence of government regulation.
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the invisible hand of the market: SURE !
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Not to sound like a broken record, but: Corporations and free markets are mutually exclusive. Simply the existence of a corporation (which is a government endorsed entity) is a hindrance against the free market.
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Forgive my ignorance but isn't the governments recognition of a corporation irrelevant? A freemarket can have corporations.. you would just call it an "organization", "family business", or "group working together". But it would be the exact same thing.. with or without government recognition and labeling.
It seems to me that the creation of the corporate entity is a good thing because as people come and go the company still has to maintain it's records and pay taxes. I can't imagine a non-corporate (or o
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The primary complaint against corporations is the privilege of limited liability for torts. Limited liability for debts is something that could exist in a free market; that would be a private matter between the members of an organization and their creditors. Limited liability for torts, however, is something that cannot exist in a free market. Those injured by actions taken on behalf of any organization have the right to seek compensation from the individuals responsible, not just the organization they were
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That makes perfect sense to me. I've been running scenerios in my mind and as long as an individual(s) led the corporation to do harm, it's a good thing. I can see ambiguous situations though where many people are collectively guilty through a chain of events that led unknowingly to harm. In that situation the collective/corporation is to blame for the damage and not the individuals. But maybe not, i don't know.. maybe it always points to an individual. Does intent to harm matter at all?
Does the free m
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I can see ambiguous situations though where many people are collectively guilty through a chain of events that led unknowingly to harm. In that situation the collective/corporation is to blame for the damage and not the individuals.
I agree that such situations may exist. Unforeseeable and accidental harm is a tricky subject. However, this applies equally well to issues of diffuse responsibility outside of any formal organization, so I don't see it as a particular problem of corporations. The existence of a formal organization may make it easier to define the group responsible, but then again it may simply be misleading: there could be members who did not contribute to the harm, or there could be others outside the organization who did
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Thanks for the explaination. It makes me laugh a little to think about spreading the restitution/retribution across the company or several people in it anyways.
I'm picturing a 100k$ fine that must be paid from employee pockets based on a breakdown of wage divided by total profit over a fixed period (like 1 year or so). Wage should also include all bonuses and cash values of benefits and perks (like shares, vacation, personal jet). The finacial burden would be very top heavy in most of today's big busines
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So... what hardware would they run on then? VMs hosting VMs hosting VMs hosting VMs?
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Virtualized storage? why?
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Now, the tricky bit is defining what the metrics should be
And there is the rub, what happens when a new innovation makes the metrics being used obsolete? This regulation is really unnecessary. One of the largest costs of a data center will be its power consumption, any company that wants to remain competitive over the long run will build its data center as energy efficient as is cost effective. The effect of such regulations will be to cause companies that would otherwise build datacenters to continue to manage their data in a distributed fashion because the cost