BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Data centers in space face tech hurdles
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Thu, 30 Apr 2026 10:35:14 -0500
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 * Originally in: SF_Reality

SpaceX's theorized data centers in space face 'significant technical 
complexity and unproven technologies,' and the 'unpredictable environment of 
space' means they may not be commercially viable

Date:
Wed, 29 Apr 2026 20:35:00 +0000

SpaceX warns investors that orbital AI data centers face unproven technology 
risks, harsh space conditions, and economic challenges that may prevent 
viability.

The company disclosed these risks in its pre-IPO S-1 filing, which US 
securities law requires to inform investors of potential pitfalls while 
shielding the company from future legal liability. "Our initiatives to 
develop orbital AI compute and in-orbit, lunar, and interplanetary 
industrialization are in early stages, involve technical complexity and 
unproven technologies, and may not achieve commercial viability," SpaceX said 
in an excerpt from the filing seen by Reuters .
 
A reality check behind the hype

Any future orbital data centers will operate "in the harsh and unpredictable 
environment of space, exposing them to a wide and unique range of 
space-related risks that could cause them to malfunction or fail," the 
document added. 

Elon Musk has been characteristically bullish about space-based AI in recent 
public appearances. 

He said at the World Economic Forum in January 2026 that building AI data 
centers in space was "a no-brainer" and that it would be the cheapest place 
to put AI within two to three years. 

 AI tools which function perfectly on Earth would need to withstand the 
environmental conditions of space without any possibility of on-site repairs. 

To deploy data centers in space, SpaceX relies on Starship, its 
next-generation fully reusable rocket, but it has suffered several delays and 
testing failures.

"Any failure or delay in the development of Starship at scale or in achieving 
the required launch cadence, reusability, and capabilities thereof would 
delay or limit our ability to execute our growth strategy," the filing said. 

If Starship does not achieve its promised launch cadence and reusability, the 
economics of placing a data center in orbit collapse entirely. What must be 
solved before space data centers can work The filing's warnings boil down to 
one fundamental problem: no one has ever built and operated a data center in 
space before. 

Radiation can corrupt memory and damage electronics beyond what Earth-based 
shielding can easily prevent. 

Temperature swings between sunlight and shadow can stress components beyond 
their design limits. 

There is no way to repair or upgrade hardware once it is in orbit, meaning 
every component must work perfectly for its entire intended lifespan. 

SpaceX would need to solve all of these problems while also making the 
economics work against Earth-based alternatives that improve every year. 

A data center on the ground costs less to build, less to maintain, and 
technicians can fix it with a spare part and a screwdriver. 

Until SpaceX shows that its orbital infrastructure can operate reliably and 
affordably in space, the warnings in the filing are not just legal 
boilerplate but a genuine assessment of commercial reality.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/spacexs-theorized-data-centers-in-space-face-sig
nificant-technical-complexity-and-unproven-technologies-and-the-unpredictable-
environment-of-space-means-they-may-not-be-commercially-viable

$$
--- MultiMail/DOS
 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

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