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Following three strikes on data centres, Iran has signalled that technology infrastructure will continue to be in the firing line.

Boasting political stability and access to cheap energy, the UAE was supposed to be ground zero for the next wave of AI development.

In the space of four days in May 2025, US President Donald Trump toured Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, and announced more than $2.8 trillion in investment pledges.

The centrepiece was a $700 billion AI data centre in Abu Dhabi, to be built in partnership with Open AI, NVIDIA, Oracle and Cisco. OpenAI claimed the facility could eventually serve half the world’s population.

In October 2025, Australia’s AirTrunk also announced a separate $4.2 billion deal to build a data centre in nearby Saudi Arabia.

The future of AI in the Gulf seemed bright. But that all changed in the space of three drone strikes.

This region is no longer a secure place to build this kind of infrastructure, says Jessie Moritz, senior lecturer in political economy at the ANU. “No country wants to put its data centres in an unstable environment.”

The strikes were part of Iran’s strategy of “asymmetrical warfare,” says Dr Moritz.

Iran has launched attacks on civilian infrastructure across the Gulf states — from hotels to oil refineries to water desalination plants — in an attempt to make the conflict costly for its adversaries.

Already, the price of oil is rising. Key shipping routes have been brought to a standstill. Air travel is in disarray.

Now, data centres have become strategic targets, too. Big tech added to Iran’s list of targets

The US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, has been sounding a bit like a tech executive lately.

The US military will become “AI-first”, he said. It will “unleash experimentation” and “eliminate bureaucratic barriers”.

The US and Israeli militaries are also using AI to identify targets.

Big tech firms — including Amazon — have long worked with the US military, which has turned them into targets in the conflict with Iran.

Military use was cited by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard in justifying one of last week’s strikes on the Amazon data centres. On Thursday, that dynamic only deepened.

According to Al Jazeera, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard published a list of “new targets”, including data centres and offices for several US-based tech companies.

A spokesperson for a state-affiliated media agency said that, since the US had struck a bank branch in Tehran, these technology assets were now the legitimate targets of retaliatory strikes. War raises costs, risks for data centres

The task of running a reliable data centre is expensive, even under normal circumstances. They consume significant amounts of water and electricity, require highly trained workers to be on-shift around the clock, and need to be secured against cyber attacks.

The costs will only rise when caught up in a conflict zone.

“Protecting it against missiles, drones, blast effects, shrapnel, fire, water damage, and cascading utility failures is another order of difficulty,” says Kristian Alexander, lead researcher at the Rabdan Security & Defence Institute in Abu Dhabi.

These strikes may “drive up insurance premiums, [and] may make it harder to attract engineering talent”, as Sam Winter-Levy, a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told Bloomberg TV.

Data centres are also notoriously difficult to hide. They are massive structures that emit a large heat signature and have a distinctive look in satellite imagery.

The costs of fortifying the largest data centres against these new threats could run into the “low hundreds of millions of dollars” per facility, estimates Dr Alexander.

It is wise to spread the risk around, and these systems are already built with redundancy in mind. Amazon has three data centres in each of the UAE and Bahrain, which should be able to gracefully handle the loss of a single facility in both.

But that still wasn’t enough to keep services running.

The two centres hit in the UAE went down at the same time and caused severe outages. There were disruptions to all sorts of services in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, including banking, taxi and food delivery apps.

This kind of coordinated attack reveals the vulnerability of these systems, even when considerable redundancy is built in — which only raises the risks and costs higher.

“If data centres become increasingly targeted in war,” says Zachary Kallenborn, a PhD researcher at King’s College London, “it is reasonable to expect tech companies to weigh that risk in deciding where they build future centres”.

And the threats to digital infrastructure in the Middle East don’t start and end with data centres either. There’s another piece of digital infrastructure, just as critical, that could also be put at risk.

Whether the targets are data centres or undersea cables or another kind of digital infrastructure, disruptions in the Middle East can ripple outwards.

Last year, Dr Kallenborn spoke with senior officials in the US about these risks.

He concluded that “infrastructure protection policy is very nationally focused”, and doesn’t often extend to foreign infrastructure, even when it is critical to that country’s interests.

Since publishing his research, though, he has been heartened to see officials recognising that “a real, unaddressed problem exists”.

“The open question is what comes next,” he says, “what specific policies, programs, and regulations can best reduce the risks?

“Honestly, I do not know.”

satire? that shit is funny as hell.
In silicon valley there is an episode where a bunch of phones explode because of a software problem. A lot like the pager attack trump got a trophy for. And musk could take any of these cars and “self drive” them to where ever, and “update” their discharge parameters or something, then boom. The trucks are 10k lbs too. Bet you could take a small building down with one without much fuss. They are pretty fast. Scary shit. Musk is a huge problem. Watch all gov envoys being his swasticars and then he can take people out russian style. opps, accident, again.
Just like the pager attack, or in silicon valley with the hooli phones. I figure musk could turn these things into self placing IEDs he can trigger remotely with a software patch. Maybe some discharge parameter change or something.
idk, maybe a soda can of thermite and a sparkler it the right spot. not sure of any details, just something I read, in a book
heatpump water heaters are looking good. Super easy to install. No venting needed and they run on 120v.

docs.mrchromebox.tech/docs/getting-started.html

I like your ideas, even though I don’t understand it all. :)

Tell the kids I am counting on them!!!

Getting Started | MrChromebox.tech

MrChromebox.tech website

Mrchromebox made a replacement firmware for chromebooks so you can install other operating systems on them.
boards of directors have a fiduciary duty to the shareholders. If they did something they knew wasn’t going to result in the max short term profits they can be found in violation. Just a race to the bottom.
its more mike judge prophecy stuff. So much of whats going on now was covered in that show.