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Re: Exclusive: Google To Go Nuclear
Exclusive: Google To Go Nuclear
by Michael Arrington on Mar 31, 2010
Google has acquired a company that has created a new process for highly efficient isotope separation, we'™ve confirmed from multiple sources. The primary use of this technology, say experts we'™ve spoken with, is uranium enrichment.
Enriched uranium is a necessary ingredient in the creation of nuclear energy, and one source we'™ve spoken with at Google says that this is part of the Google Green Initiative. The company will use the new technology to enable it to design and possibly build small, mobile and highly efficient nuclear power generators. 'Google has already begun building an enrichment plant,� says a high ranking IAEA source.
As GreenBeat points out, 'Google finally decided to launch a dedicated unit of the company for designing and building its own solar panels, wind turbines, energy efficiency devices, etc. So far, its green efforts have been pursued by separate projects within the company. Nuclear is an obvious next step for the company.�
GreenBeat first broke the story (first titled Google Has A Big Alternate Energy Announcement Forthcoming) after seeing multiple tweets about the impending announcement.
But other sources we'™ve spoken with say Google has no real intention of pursuing nuclear energy, despite the fact that the company has promoted the use of alternate energy sources for years.
Of particular concern is the fact that the company Google acquired is based outside of the U.S., and little is known about the new enrichment technology they'™ve developed.
Nuclear power generation is a highly regulated industry. And enriched uranium is a particularly sensitive topic and creation and distribution of the substance is highly controlled.
Enriched uranium can also be used for nuclear weapons production, which is why the industry is so highly regulated.
Says one source: 'The story Google is putting out there is that the new technology will be built for clean energy production. But all of the research and development they'™re doing in this area is being conducted outside of the U.S., and the enrichment facility is also outside of the U.S.�
And more chillingly: 'It would be trivial for anyone with this technology to build a nuclear weapon.�
Google, which has been shaken by its inability to counter Chinese censorship and hacking efforts, may be engaging in enrichment research as part of a new effort to simply protect itself from outside threats.
One source pointed out that if Google were its own country, its revenues would place it at 74th on the list of countries sorted by gross domestic product. 'The U.S. government clearly won'™t protect Google from China, so Google is taking the logical step of protecting itself with a physical deterrent.�
To be clear, most of this is speculation. All we'™ve confirmed is that Google has acquired a company with a new enrichment process and that they have begun researching small, nuclear portable generators. But there is real evidence here that Google may be working on something much more sinister to counter the China threat. More as this develops.
http://tinyurl.com/yaf9rub
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Shit!...And this is how it starts, enriching uranium, gets defense contracts, the Chrome netbook OS becomes self aware, the rest is covered in Terminator 4.
- monkeychow
- Rep: 661
Re: Exclusive: Google To Go Nuclear
LMAO I forgot it was april fools today. I read that article was was like "WTF?"
- monkeychow
- Rep: 661
Re: Exclusive: Google To Go Nuclear
^ Oh yeah...sorry it's april 1 here now...so I didn't check the date.
Re: Exclusive: Google To Go Nuclear
Yeah, it isn't yet. Just kindof have a feeling. Although I didn't read it all. Myb they'll have their "press release" tomorrow. Not sure it'd be a wise PR move though (to play such a prank), after all the stuff with China they in the middle of. I'm just on edge about 4/1 ever since a friend send me this earlier. I don't think anyone posted it here, which I was surprised.
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