The Business of Snooping Attracts Silicon Valley’s Attention

The Business of Snooping Attracts Silicon Valley’s Attention


Silicon Valley is piling into the business‍ of snooping

In early September New Yorkers may have noticed an ⁤unwelcome ⁣guest hovering round their ‍parties. In the lead-up to ⁣Labour ⁢Day weekend the New⁢ York Police Department (NYPD) said that it would⁤ use drones to look ⁤into complaints about festivities, including back-yard‍ gatherings. Snooping police drones are an increasingly common sight in‌ America. According to ‌a recent survey ​by researchers at the Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, about a quarter of police forces ⁢now‌ use them.

Even​ more surprising is where the technology is ‌coming from. Among the NYPD’s suppliers is Skydio, a Silicon Valley firm that uses artificial​ intelligence (AI)‍ to make drones⁤ easy to‌ fly, allowing officers ​to control ​them with little training. Skydio is backed by Andreessen Horowitz, a venture-capital (VC) giant, and Accel, ⁢one of its​ peers. The NYPD is also​ buying from BRINC, another startup, which makes flying machines equipped with night-vision cameras that can smash through windows. Sam Altman of OpenAI, the startup behind ChatGPT, is ⁤among BRINC’s investors.

It ‍may seem odd that Silicon Valley is⁤ helping American law enforcement snoop ​on troublemakers. ‌Supporting state surveillance ‌sits awkwardly with the libertarian values espoused ⁢by many American tech luminaries who came of age in the early days of the internet. Although Silicon Valley got its start supplying chips for America’s defence ⁤industry in the 1950s, its relations with the state withered as its attention shifted​ from self-guided missiles to ‍e-commerce and iPhones.

2023-11-05 12:18:41

Source from www.economist.com

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