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The Tufts Daily
Where you read it first | Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Google May Already Be Launching Floating Data Centers Off U.S. Coasts

Google, one of the world's largest users of data, may finally be making good on a five year-old patent to build offshore data centers — cooled and powered by the ocean, and potentially beyond reach of the government.

An investigative report by CNET Friday found a great deal of evidence connecting the search giant to the mysterious "Building 3" on Treasure Island in San Francisco Bay, above. The building seems to the base for a mysterious four-story structure on a nearby barge that experts say is consistent with a floating data center.





Meanwhile, a very similar four-story building was towed on a barge into harbor in Portland, Maine, two weeks ago. On Wednesday, the Portland Herald speculated that the barge may have something to do with Google's offshore data center patent.

The Portland barge is registered to the same shell company connected to the Treasure Island operation, called By And Large — very similar to the fictional "Buy and Large" company featured in several Pixar movies. It seems someone at Google is a Pixar fan.

The patent Google filed in 2008, granted in 2009, describes a data center on a ship that is perpetually powered by ocean currents. It uses seawater to cool the servers.

Regulating temperature is one of the major costs in maintaining a data center. In recent years, the electricity used to power data centers has been climbing toward 2% of total electricity usage in the U.S.

Keeping data in the oceans would cut millions from Google's data storage costs. And it can't have failed to escape the company's attention that putting data centers in international waters would theoretically put it beyond the reach of government interference. Sorry, NSA.

Image: Google Maps