âA driver of political violenceâ: how the breakneck AI boom is fueling anti-tech extremism
Backlash against AI is taking an extremist turn, following in the footsteps of earlier techno-pessimist militants
When a 20-year-old man from Texas was arrested earlier this year for allegedly trying to burn down OpenAIâs headquarters and Sam Altmanâs house, authorities found an anti-AI manifesto alongside his lighter and a jug of kerosene. It was one of a spate of attacks that has caused alarm among researchers, the tech industry and law enforcement about the rise of anti-tech extremism.
In April, an Italian ânature pilledâ Instagram influencer was arrested in Rome and charged with plotting a series of anti-tech attacks that took inspiration from Ted âThe Unabomberâ Kaczynski. Two self-described âecofascistsâ that carried out a deadly anti-Muslim attack on a mosque in San Diego last month also cited âAI slopâ and JD Vanceâs ties to Palantir as motivations for their violence in their manifesto. An Indianapolis city councilor woke up earlier this year to gunshots being fired into his home before finding a note that read âNO DATA CENTERSâ.
The growing public backlash to the tech industryâs rapid rollout of artificial intelligence has taken many, mostly-non violent forms such as local communities organizing against datacenters and political candidates promising increased oversight. Yet at the fringes, researchers say grievances against the AI industry and its leaders are animating old violent extremist movements and fomenting new ones.
âAI is becoming this driver of political violence, and thatâs a very new phenomenon,â said Jordyn Abrams, a researcher at the Program on Extremism at George Washington University.
While much of the early public discussion around generative AI and extremism focused on how malign actors like terrorist groups could misuse products such as ChatGPT for propaganda purposes or plotting attacks, there is more recent attention given to how the AI industry as a whole can radicalize people. What motivates someone to extremist violence might not be a conversation with a chatbot, researchers say, but the society-wide disruption, narrative of existential threat and lack of accountability that has come with the AI boom.
In the same way that AI has come to pervade many facets of modern life, the technology has also filtered into the way that extremists think about the world. Whether it is violent anti-government groups opposing mass surveillance, ecofascists with environmental grievances, neo-Nazi accelerationists bent on collapsing critical tech infrastructure or the man who allegedly targeted Altmanâs house worried about superpowerful artificial intelligence destroying humanity, AI has become a fixation across the extremist spectrum.
âIt really transcends these left-right dichotomies,â said Yannick Veilleux-Lepage, an associate professor at the Royal Military College of Canada. âWeâre seeing a lot of different groups, a lot of different ideologies being framed through a lens of anti-AI.â
The modern anti-tech movement has a long lineage. Periods of technological change are historically accompanied by backlash from the people most affected, with researchers often pointing to the early 19th-century luddite rebellion of British textile workers smashing automated knitting machines as they demanded more labor rights. The next 200 years brought waves of violent labor disputes and political violence that accompanied techâs market disruptions, uneven accumulation of wealth and disenfranchisement of workers.
In the 1990s, there was cultural pushback against the rise of the personal computer and the fear of how it would disrupt society. Common complaints included fears of replacing human workers, environmental harm and crumbling healthy social structures.
âHavenât you heard? It wants your job. It peddles you smut. It corrupts your kids. Itâs cold, sterile, inhuman. Suddenly, itâs okay to hate your computer,â read a New York Magazine cover story from 1995 on the âNew Ludditesâ.
The same year as New York Magazine ran its cover story, the Washington Post and the New York Times published the Unabomberâs anti-tech manifesto, a 35,000-word screed against industrial society that has proliferated online in the years since and become the closest thing that anti-tech extremism has to a foundational text.
What separates anti-AI extremism from these previous waves of tech backlash, researchers say, is partly the speed and scale of how AI is bringing about economic, social and political change.
âNot only are these whole-of-society changes and not only are they really disruptive, theyâre happening really quickly,â Veilleux-Lepage said. âThere isnât time for people to build resilience or to inoculate themselves from these changesâ.
The AI industryâs longstanding talking points â that the technology will revolutionize the world, if not end it â also lend themselves to a radicalizing narrative that AI poses an existential threat and must be stopped at all costs. When Veilleux-LePage gives talks to policymakers about anti-tech extremism, one of his slides simply features a series of quotes from CEOs.
âIn order to radicalize people, you donât actually need to have theorists or ideologues that are calling people to violence against AI, because the tech CEOs are doing a pretty good case,â Veilleux-LePage said.
Altman has often framed the changes AI will bring as something that may be difficult, but is ultimately both positive â above all, he describes the change as inevitable.
âI expect some really bad stuff to happen because of the technology which also has happened with previous technologies,â Altman said on venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitzâs podcast last year.
While tech CEOs are publicly optimistic about the resilience of society and the change that AI will bring about, it is also clear that they are privately concerned with the threat of political violence. Spending on personal security for executives has ballooned over the past five years amid incidents such as the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, while tech leaders such as Elon Musk now pour millions into their own protection. SpaceX revealed in its IPO filing earlier this year that it paid $4m last year to Muskâs private security firm, double what it had spent only two years before.
There are signs over the past year that the AI industry is shifting its rhetoric as it grapples with widespread public distrust. Altman claimed last month that AI would probably not lead to the âjobs apocalypseâ that he once discussed, even as companies like Meta lay off tens of thousands of workers. OpenAI and Anthropic have meanwhile both announced funds and thinktanks this year aimed at helping civil institutions adapt to AI, with OpenAIâs non-profit organization committing $250m to grants for programs that help workers navigate AI upheaval.
Major AI firms are hiring national security, intelligence, and weapons experts to monitor threats and misuse of their technology, including some with a background in extremism and counter-terrorism research. OpenAIâs head of intelligence previously worked as one of the foremost academic experts on the Islamic State and wrote a book on the groupâs belief that it was bringing about the apocalypse. OpenAI and Anthropic did not respond to requests for interviews with their intelligence or security experts.
The closing off of legitimate avenues to address public opposition to AI, as well as the feeling that the technology is being forced upon society, is creating what researchers describe as a gap in accountability that can further incentivize terrorism and political violence.
Donald Trump, in alignment with tech leaders, issued an executive order last year attempting to block any state-level legislation that would rein in AI development and has said that nothing will slow down the US in the global AI race. Tech billionaires are also pouring millions of dollars into lobbying and political spending in an attempt to prevent regulation of AI.
âWhen authorities are too busy, or just donât care enough, to regulate and take action, then people affected are going to take action,â said Mauro Lubrano, a lecturer at the University of Bath and author of Stop the Machines: The Rise of Anti-Technology Extremism.
Federal law enforcement documents acquired by Wired and the Intercept show that US authorities are increasingly monitoring anti-tech movements, while authorities have declared they will aggressively prosecute violent attacks. Following the attempted arson at Altmanâs house earlier this year, authorities vowed that âthe FBI will not tolerate threats against our nationâs innovation leadersâ.
Yet researchers warn that authorities risk conflating the nationwide protests and calls for increased regulation of AI with more fringe, anti-tech extremist views, which is both inaccurate and counterproductive. Programs aimed at mass surveillance and attempts to silence nonviolent anti-AI movements will inevitably backfire, Lubrano says, further pushing people to the violent fringes if they feel their legitimate grievances arenât being addressed.
âWe have this opportunity to be proactive in this while avoiding mistakes that weâve made in the past when responding to other forms of extremism,â Lubrano said. âSomething tells me that weâre not off to a great startâ.