xAI Rolls Out Data Center Dividend For Residents Around Memphis Colossus

Cover for the exhaust of power generators? Or part of a larger PR stunt to get community acceptance and build goodwill for the coming X banking platform? Or is it to put pressure on competitors as people are souring on all these data centers being built and proposed? Or a sign of how desperately Antichrist needs these for what is coming and soon?

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Musk’s Colossus is fully operational with 200,000 GPUs backed by Tesla batteries — Phase 2 to consume 300 MW, enough to power 300,000 homes

By Tyler Durden

xAI Memphis, Elon Musk’s supercomputing and data center complex in the Memphis metro area – better known as Colossus – appears to be testing a version of the “data center dividend” for residents in the surrounding community.

The offer of Starlink service with no upfront hardware costs and a substantial monthly discount appears to be an attempt by xAI to turn local goodwill into political insulation, as AI data centers face growing scrutiny over soaring power demand, grid strain, and other neighborhood-level impacts.

“As SpaceX continues to invest in the area, SpaceX is offering our neighbors in the Memphis area no upfront hardware costs on Residential @Starlink kits for new customers and a discount on home internet service plans for both new and existing customers,” Starlink wrote on X.

Starlink wrote on its website, “The discount is half the standard monthly price and is applied automatically.” 

Earlier this year, @SpaceX acquired @xAI (now SpaceXAI), which operates the Colossus datacenters in Memphis.

As SpaceX continues to invest in the area, SpaceX is offering our neighbors in the Memphis area no upfront hardware costs on Residential @Starlink kits for new customers… pic.twitter.com/BfnOHHPLOx — xAI Memphis (@xAIMemphis) June 30, 2026

xAI describes Colossus as its AI training supercomputer, built in Memphis and pitched by Musk as one of the world’s most powerful AI superclusters.

The project has become a major flashpoint because of its massive electricity demand. xAI has expanded from Colossus 1 in Memphis to Colossus 2 in Southaven, Mississippi, just across the state line, and has used natural gas turbines to supply power.

Left-wing environmental NGOs and the NAACP have sued xAI and its subsidiary, MZX Tech, alleging that some natural gas turbines were operated without proper air permits and could worsen pollution in nearby communities.

xAI’s data center dividend to the local community around Colossus may only suggest that other forms of dividends offered to local communities could one day include monthly utility bill credits, grid upgrades, and infrastructure improvements.

Perhaps other data center operators should take note of what xAI is doing, given that half of U.S. data centers scheduled for construction this year could be canceled or delayed as local resistance mounts.