Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

Whistleblower on Democrats’ AI plans: “Absolutely horrifying”

Published December 18, 2024 – By Editorial staff
Marc Andreessen says the Democratic Party's approach to AI threatens his and Silicon Valley's interests.

Investor and software developer Marc Andreessen says he was "very scared" when he met with US government officials last May to discuss the future of artificial intelligence.

He describes the meetings and the government's plans for the technology as "absolutely horrifying" – and the main reason why he abandoned the Democratic Party and supported Donald Trump.

What scared Andreessen the most was the view of those in power on what the role of government should be when it comes to AI. He described one young official he met as "radicalized", "out for blood", and whose political ideas the investor perceived as directly harmful to his own and Silicon Valley's interests.

It became clear to Mr. Andreessen that the Democratic government was seeking almost complete control of AI development and was only interested in promoting a few companies with which the government worked closely.

They actually said flat out to us – don't do AI startups, don't fund AI startups, he explains.

"Will be completely controlled"

– AI is a technology basically that the government is going to completely control, Andreessen summarizes the Biden administration's stance.

After the meetings, the entrepreneur decided to openly support Trump, whom he sees as a leader who promotes innovation. Trump's strategy of reducing government control over business and encouraging private companies in technology is the opposite of the Biden administration's policy, he says.

– I don't know much about tech, but I don't need to, because you guys know a lot about it. You guys should go build tech companies. The American tech companies should win, Trump is reported to have said.

Marc Andreessen, born July 9, 1971 in Cedar Falls, Iowa, is an American entrepreneur, investor and software developer. He is best known as the co-founder of Mosaic, the first popular web browser, and Netscape Communications, the company behind the Netscape Navigator web browser that revolutionized Internet use in the 1990s.

Andreessen graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a degree in computer science and has since become one of the most influential people in the tech industry. He is also a co-founder and partner of the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, which has invested in prominent companies such as Facebook, Twitter and Airbnb.

In 2012, he was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame in recognition of his pioneering efforts in internet development.

TNT is truly independent!

We don’t have a billionaire owner, and our unique reader-funded model keeps us free from political or corporate influence. This means we can fearlessly report the facts and shine a light on the misdeeds of those in power.

Consider a donation to keep our independent journalism running…

Swedish police secretly using Palantir’s surveillance system for years

Mass surveillance

Published yesterday 2:08 pm – By Editorial staff
Palantir Technologies headquarters in Silicon Valley.

The Swedish Police Authority has for at least five years been using an AI-based analysis tool from the notorious American security company Palantir.

The program, which has been specially adapted for Swedish conditions, can within seconds compile comprehensive profiles of individuals by combining data from various registers.

Behind the system stands the American tech company Palantir, which is internationally controversial and has been accused of involvement in surveillance activities. This summer, the company was identified in a UN report as complicit in genocide in Gaza.

The Swedish version of Palantir's Gotham platform is called Acus and uses artificial intelligence to compile, analyze and visualize large amounts of information. According to an investigation by the left-wing newspaper Dagens ETC, investigators using the system can quickly obtain detailed personal profiles that combine data from surveillance and criminal registers with information from Bank-id (Sweden's national digital identification system), mobile operators and social media.

A former analyst employed by the police, who chooses to remain anonymous, describes to the newspaper how the system was surrounded by great secrecy:

— There was very much hush-hush around that program.

Rejection of document requests

When the newspaper requested information about the system and how it is used, they were met with rejection. The Swedish Police Authority cited confidentiality and stated that they can neither "confirm nor deny relationships with Palantir" citing "danger to national security".

This is not the first time Palantir's tools have been used in Swedish law enforcement. In the high-profile Operation Trojan Shield, the FBI, with support from Palantir's technology, managed to infiltrate and intercept the encrypted messaging app Anom.

The operation led to the arrest of a large number of people connected to serious crime, both in Sweden and internationally. The FBI called the operation "a shining example of innovative law enforcement".

But the method has also received criticism. Attorney Johan Grahn, who has represented defendants in several Anom-related cases, is critical of the approach.

— In these cases, it has been indiscriminate mass surveillance, he states.

Mapping dissidents

Palantir has long sparked debate due to its assignments and methods. The company works with both American agencies and foreign security services.

In the United States, the surveillance company's systems are used to map undocumented immigrants. In the United Kingdom, British police have been criticized for using the company's technology to build registers of citizens' sex lives, political views, religious affiliation, ethnicity and union involvement – information that according to observers violates fundamental privacy principles.

This summer, a UN report also identified Palantir as co-responsible for acts of genocide in Gaza, after the company's analysis tools were allegedly used in attacks where Palestinian civilians were killed.

How extensive the Swedish police's use of the system is, and what legal frameworks govern the handling of Swedish citizens' personal data in the platform, remains unclear as long as the Swedish Police Authority chooses to keep the information classified.

OpenAI shifts from Microsoft to Amazon in new partnership

Published yesterday 10:53 am – By Editorial staff
OpenAI logo. The AI company has signed a seven-year cloud agreement with Amazon Web Services worth $38 billion.

AI company OpenAI has entered into a comprehensive agreement with Amazon Web Services worth $38 billion. The deal marks a clear step away from Microsoft's previous monopoly position as cloud provider.

According to the agreement announced on Monday, OpenAI gains immediate access to hundreds of thousands of graphics cards from Nvidia in American data centers.

Scaling frontier AI requires massive, reliable compute. Our partnership with AWS strengthens the broad compute ecosystem that will power this next era and bring advanced AI to everyone, says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman to CNBC.

Amazon's stock closed four percent higher on Monday and reached a record high closing value. Over the past two trading days, the e-commerce giant has risen 14 percent, the best two-day period since November 2022.

Seven-year agreement

Until this year, OpenAI had an exclusive cloud agreement with Microsoft, which first backed the company in 2019 and has invested a total of $13 billion. In January, Microsoft announced that they would no longer be the exclusive cloud provider, but instead have right of first refusal on new requests.

Last week, Microsoft's preferential status expired according to renegotiated commercial terms, which freed OpenAI to collaborate more broadly with other major cloud providers. However, OpenAI will continue to spend large sums with Microsoft, which was confirmed last week when the company announced they will purchase additional Azure services for $250 billion.

For Amazon, the agreement is significant both in size and scope, but also somewhat sensitive since the cloud giant has close ties with OpenAI's rival Anthropic. Amazon has invested billions of dollars in Anthropic and is currently building an $11 billion data center in Indiana that is designed exclusively for Anthropic.

The agreement between OpenAI and Amazon is valid for seven years, but at present, no plans beyond 2026 have been finalized.

IT expert warns: ID requirements online bring us closer to totalitarian surveillance

Mass surveillance

Published November 3, 2025 – By Editorial staff
Swedish Liberal Party politician Nina Larsson wants to introduce age verification – but IT experts warn of serious consequences

IT security specialist Karl Emil Nikka advises Sweden against following the UK's example of mandatory age verification on pornographic websites. The risk of data breaches and increased surveillance is too great, he argues.

Swedish Gender Equality Minister Nina Larsson wants Sweden to introduce technical barriers requiring age verification on pornographic websites to protect children from explicit sexual content.

The proposal is based on the British model where websites must verify users' age or identity, for example through authentication with ID cards or credit cards.

But Karl Emil Nikka, an IT security specialist, is strongly critical of the proposal. He points to serious flaws in the British solution, not least the risk of data breaches.

As an example, he mentions the leak from the messaging platform Discord, where photos of 70,000 users ended up in the wrong hands after a cyberattack in connection with the law change. Additionally, the barriers are easy to circumvent using VPN services, which caused the use of such services to skyrocket when the British law came into effect.

Risks surveillance

Nikka also warns that requirements for online identification bring Sweden closer to a type of surveillance that otherwise only exists in totalitarian states.

— It's a small problem as long as we live in a democracy, but it's damn dangerous to believe we always will, he says.

Instead, parents should be encouraged to use the controls already built into phones and other devices, where one can easily choose which sites to block.

— From a security perspective, it's the only reasonable solution, Nikka states.

Foreign sites attract

An additional risk with technical barriers is that young users turn to lesser-known foreign sites that don't care about legal requirements, Nikka argues. Jannike Tillå, head of communications and social benefit at the Swedish Internet Foundation, confirms this picture.

— According to experts in various countries, it seems that people have turned to other lesser-known websites abroad, she says.

However, Tillå believes that technical solutions can have a place, provided they are more anonymous than the British ones and combined with other measures.

— It can help raise thresholds and reduce exposure.

Conversations crucial

At the same time, she emphasizes the importance of complementing any technical solutions with investments in digital literacy and, above all, conversations between parents and children.

— That's where real protection begins. We know that many parents find it difficult to have the porn conversation, but you should do it early, says Jannike Tillå.

She stresses that the question of privacy and freedom online must not be set against child protection.

— We must find that balance and manage both things, she concludes.

Musk plans data centers in space using Starlink satellites

The future of AI

Published November 2, 2025 – By Editorial staff
Photo: Space X

Elon Musk's space company SpaceX announces plans to build data centers in space based on Starlink satellites. Interest in space-based data storage is surging among tech giants as artificial intelligence demands increasingly more computing power.

Artificial intelligence is driving a growing need for data storage and processing power, prompting several tech companies to turn their attention to space. After former Google CEO Eric Schmidt acquired space company Relativity Space in May, and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos predicted gigawatt-scale data centers in space within 10 to 20 years, Elon Musk is now entering the race.

In a post on social media platform X, Musk explained that SpaceX satellites could be used for this purpose. "Simply scaling up Starlink V3 satellites, which have high speed laser links would work. SpaceX will be doing this", he wrote in response to an article about the potential for space-based data centers.

Musk's announcement dramatically raises the profile of this emerging industry. SpaceX's Starlink constellation is already the world's dominant space-based infrastructure, and the company has demonstrated it can profitably deliver high-speed broadband to millions of customers worldwide.

Free energy and no environmental costs

Advocates for space-based data centers highlight clear advantages: unlimited and free energy from the sun, as well as the absence of environmental costs associated with building these facilities on Earth, where opposition to energy-intensive data centers has begun to grow.

Critics argue, however, that it is economically impractical to build such facilities in space and that proponents underestimate the technology required to make it work.

Caleb Henry, research director at analytics firm Quilty Space, believes the development is worth watching closely.

— The amount of momentum from heavyweights in the tech industry is very much worth paying attention to. If they start putting money behind it, we could see another transformation of what's done in space, he says in an interview.

Tenfold capacity

SpaceX's current Starlink V2 mini satellites have a maximum download capacity of approximately 100 Gbps. The upcoming V3 satellite is expected to increase this capacity tenfold, to 1 Tbps. This is not an unprecedented capacity for individual satellites – telecom company Viasat has built a geostationary satellite with the same capacity that will soon be launched – but it is unprecedented at the scale SpaceX is planning.

The company intends to launch around 60 Starlink V3 satellites with each Starship rocket launch. These launches could occur as early as the first half of 2026, as SpaceX has already tested a satellite dispenser on Starship.

— Nothing else in the rest of the satellite industry that comes close to that amount of capacity, Henry notes.

Exactly what a "scaling up" of Starlink V3 satellites would look like is not clear, but the development speaks for itself. The first operational Starlink satellites were launched just over five years ago with a mass of approximately 300 kg and a capacity of 15 Gbps. Starlink V3 satellites will likely weigh 1,500 kg.

Our independent journalism needs your support!
We appreciate all of your donations to keep us alive and running.

Our independent journalism needs your support!
Consider a donation.

You can donate any amount of your choosing, one-time payment or even monthly.
We appreciate all of your donations to keep us alive and running.

Dont miss another article!

Sign up for our newsletter today!

Take part of uncensored news – free from industry interests and political correctness from the Polaris of Enlightenment – every week.