US Agencies Flag Anti‑Tech Extremism as AI Grows

SkimNews Take
The classification of "anti-tech violent extremism" as a domestic threat suggests a preemptive move to manage social unrest by framing technological resistance as a security issue rather than a socio-economic one.
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- Department of Homeland Security and the FBI released over 1,000 pages of unpublished reports that identify “anti‑tech violent extremism” as a new domestic threat.
- New York Intelligence and Counterterrorism Bureau warned that AI adoption could trigger large‑scale protests and violent unrest in major cities like New York City within five years.
- Ziz Laota was identified as the leader of a cult‑like group whose members were charged with murder, motivated by an extremist belief in AI existential risk.
- President Trump issued National Security Presidential Memo 7 directing the DOJ to target individuals holding anti‑American, anti‑Christian, and anti‑capitalist beliefs.
- Sebastian Gorka named left‑wing extremism as a top counter‑terrorism priority in his public strategy.
Why it matters: Civil liberties groups lose privacy as the DOJ expands surveillance to target anti‑tech activists, while tech firms face heightened regulatory scrutiny and potential operational disruptions in data‑center expansions.


