The Web Hosting Squeeze: How Data Center Fights Can Make The Open Web More Expensive
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Ready when you are.
Status: Long-form data-center cost-shift analysis from the BadPD Web Hosting Desk. This is not anti-data-center coverage. This is pro-build-it-right coverage.
Desk thesis: If compute and colocation become harder to build, the open web pays before the biggest platforms do.
The open web depends on cheap enough power, racks, transit, storage, backups, and CDNs. Data-center scarcity can squeeze small hosts before it slows Big Tech.
Why This Desk Gets It
This package is split across desks because one headline cannot carry the whole story. The financial desk follows scarcity pricing. The web-hosting desk follows the open-web bill. The surveillance desk follows smart TVs, PCs, and ad-funded services. The forecast desk follows where this goes if the country keeps blocking capacity without writing better rules.
What Is Confirmed
Data centers support ordinary hosting, storage, backup, CDN, email, payment, fraud, analytics, and security services.
Industry reporting describes delivery and power as constraints, not background costs.
Cloud storage bills include layers such as storage class, requests, egress, retrieval, lifecycle rules, and usage patterns.
Water, sewer, and utility pauses can constrain where new capacity can be built.
What Is Not Confirmed
This does not prove a sudden hosting-price shock is guaranteed.
It does not prove small hosts cannot adapt with efficiency, regional diversification, or better capacity planning.
It does not prove cloud providers will pass every cost through transparently.
What Is Missing
Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
BadPD Angle
Most people experience data centers through a website that loads, an email that sends, a backup that restores, or a checkout page that works.
When capacity tightens, cheap plans get shaved first: fewer CPU seconds, lower inode limits, higher backup charges, tighter bandwidth terms, and more paid add-ons.
The biggest cloud companies can use scarcity as a moat. Independent hosts and publishers get stuck fighting for the scraps.
A build-it-right data-center policy is also an open-web policy. The goal should be enough capacity, cleanly built, with the real public costs priced into the permit.
The Cost-Shift Chain
Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms.
A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval.
The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved.
Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design.
Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors.
The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support.
Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs.
BadPD is pro-build-it-right: build the useful infrastructure, make companies pay full freight, and stop hiding costs in public water, household power bills, or consumer privacy.
What To Watch Next
Watch moratorium language, public-service commission dockets, interconnection queues, power-purchase agreements, water and sewer authority minutes, cloud pricing changes, hosting-plan resource limits, streaming ad loads, smart-TV privacy defaults, PC AI feature defaults, and new device account requirements. The source trail should stay attached because this story will mutate as companies and cities respond.
The clean policy line remains boring because boring is enforceable: publish water, publish power, publish costs, publish who pays, publish consumer data practices, and publish the rule path for approval. If a city cannot say what a compliant data center looks like, it is not governing. If a company cannot show how it pays for its own infrastructure, it is not building. It is billing the public later.
Featured image is symbolic editorial artwork created for BadPD. It is not a depiction of a real data center, city, device, consumer, worker, television, computer, public hearing, or scene from The Peripheral.
Receipt discipline: Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: BadPD is pro-build-it-right: build the useful infrastructure, make companies pay full freight, and stop hiding costs in public water, household power bills, or consumer privacy. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: BadPD is pro-build-it-right: build the useful infrastructure, make companies pay full freight, and stop hiding costs in public water, household power bills, or consumer privacy. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: BadPD is pro-build-it-right: build the useful infrastructure, make companies pay full freight, and stop hiding costs in public water, household power bills, or consumer privacy. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: BadPD is pro-build-it-right: build the useful infrastructure, make companies pay full freight, and stop hiding costs in public water, household power bills, or consumer privacy. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: BadPD is pro-build-it-right: build the useful infrastructure, make companies pay full freight, and stop hiding costs in public water, household power bills, or consumer privacy. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Data-center policy should protect water and ratepayers without turning compute into a luxury resource controlled only by the largest platforms. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: A moratorium can be smart when it buys time for enforceable rules. It becomes weak policy when it blocks capacity without publishing the path to compliant approval. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: The public should demand added clean capacity, water accounting, grid-impact studies, ratepayer shields, and real penalties before major loads are approved. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Compute scarcity does not delete demand. It shifts costs into cloud bills, hosting plans, subscriptions, ad loads, telemetry, and product design. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Receipt discipline: Scarcity favors incumbents because companies with existing campuses, power contracts, fiber, and capital can outlast smaller competitors. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Evidence of whether small hosts are losing capacity to AI-first or hyperscale buyers.
Receipt discipline: The open web depends on boring infrastructure: racks, power, cooling, storage, bandwidth, backups, DNS, CDN, security, email, and support. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Independent tracking of shared-hosting CPU/RAM/storage limits over time.
Receipt discipline: Surveillance-heavy business models become more attractive when companies need to keep sticker prices low while recovering higher infrastructure costs. For this desk, the practical reporting question is: Colocation rack and power pricing by region after moratorium announcements.
Source Trail
- DOE: data center electricity demand report release – DOE summary of the LBNL-backed report estimating U.S. data-center electricity use could rise from 176 TWh in 2023 to 325-580 TWh by 2028.
- Data Center Frontier / CBRE: demand surges as delivery becomes the constraint – Industry reporting on record demand, low vacancy, rising pricing, and power/construction constraints.
- Finout: 2026 cloud and AI storage pricing comparison – FinOps-oriented source on cloud storage billing, egress, retrieval, request, and lifecycle cost complexity.
- McKinsey: The cost of compute, a $7 trillion race – Analysis describing the global capital race to scale compute infrastructure by 2030.
- Data Center Dynamics: Ypsilanti utility water/sewer moratorium – Industry report on a Michigan utility authority imposing a one-year water and sewage service moratorium for new data centers.
- S&P Global: data-center legislation roundup – Roundup of state and local data-center legislation, moratoriums, incentive fights, and utility cost-shifting rules.
- DOE: clean energy resources to meet data-center electricity demand – DOE resource describing data-center load growth, EPRI estimates, and clean-energy options.
BadPD source repair: what this page can prove
This article has been upgraded from a fast watcher item into a clearer receipt ledger for The Web Hosting Squeeze: How Data Center Fights Can Make The Open Web More Expensive. The original item remains above. This repair section does not add a verdict. It explains what the attached source trail can support, what it cannot support by itself, and what records would make the story stronger.
The topic lane is Web Hosting Outlook. BadPD is treating www.energy.gov, www.datacenterfrontier.com, www.finout.io, www.mckinsey.com, www.datacenterdynamics.com, www.spglobal.com as receipts, not as final authority. A receipt can prove that a claim was made, that an agency published a statement, that a news outlet reported a fact, or that a public dispute exists. A receipt does not automatically prove the whole story. That is why this page keeps the links visible and keeps the open questions attached.
Source ledger
- www.energy.gov: DOE: data center electricity demand report release
- www.datacenterfrontier.com: Data Center Frontier / CBRE: demand surges as delivery becomes the constraint
- www.finout.io: Finout: 2026 cloud and AI storage pricing comparison
- www.mckinsey.com: McKinsey: The cost of compute, a $7 trillion race
- www.datacenterdynamics.com: Data Center Dynamics: Ypsilanti utility water/sewer moratorium
- www.spglobal.com: S&P Global: data-center legislation roundup
- www.energy.gov: DOE: clean energy resources to meet data-center electricity demand
What is confirmed right now
The page confirms that BadPD captured a public source trail around this claim and preserved the lead item with supporting checks. It also confirms the publication context, the source lane, and the follow-up direction. If the attached links disagree, the disagreement is part of the story. If they agree only on the existence of a claim, then the claim still needs stronger records before it should be treated as settled fact.
For readers, the useful value is the source map. It shows where the first claim came from, where the cross-checks came from, and which public institutions or publishers are part of the record. That matters because low-quality news often strips the claim away from its paper trail. BadPD keeps the paper trail close to the claim so the reader can test it.
What is not proved yet
This page should not be read as proof of every allegation, quote, motive, number, or timeline in the wider dispute. It should be read as a live accountability record. The strongest next version would add primary documents, direct video, court filings, official transcripts, public-meeting records, procurement records, agency data, or named on-the-record responses from the people and institutions involved.
Questions BadPD still wants answered
- What document, video, court record, official release, meeting record, or first-hand report supports the central claim?
- Which parts are confirmed, which parts are alleged, and which parts still need independent public records?
- Who had power, who carried risk, who paid the cost, and who still owes the public a clearer answer?
- What follow-up record would make the story stronger enough for a full BadPD long-form update?
Why this stays on BadPD
BadPD covers stories where power, public money, police authority, courts, public safety, infrastructure, recalls, war powers, or public records are in play. A story does not need to be finished to deserve tracking. But it does need a clear label. This page is now labeled as a source-ledger item unless and until the record supports a stronger long-form conclusion.
The standard from here is simple. If a stronger record appears, this post should be updated with the new receipt and the claim should move from pending to confirmed, disputed, or corrected. If no stronger record appears, the post should stay cautious. That is the difference between accountability coverage and content churn.
Send receipts for the desk to research
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