Security07:03 · 8h ago

Anti-AI Activist Disappears Amid Rising Tensions in Silicon Valley Resistance Movement

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

Sam Kirshner, a 27-year-old electrical engineering technician and prominent leader of the anti-AI activist group "Stop AI," mysteriously disappeared in November after growing frustrated with the slow progress of nonviolent protests against major tech companies. Kirshner had led strikes and demonstrations outside OpenAI’s San Francisco offices, and his disappearance has heightened concerns among U.S. domestic security agencies about the increasing radicalization within the AI resistance movement.

The movement operates under an apocalyptic belief that superhuman AI development could lead to human extinction. Following warnings from Kirshner’s associates about potential violent actions against OpenAI, San Francisco police imposed a temporary lockdown on the OpenAI campus, instructing employees to conceal company identification in public. This escalation reflects broader public unease, with recent Quinnipiac University polls showing 70% of American adults fear AI will eliminate jobs, and over half believe it will cause more harm than good in daily life.

The anti-technology sentiment is fueled by mass layoffs in the tech sector, increased energy consumption by data centers, and reports of sophisticated cyberattacks. The tension has already resulted in criminal acts, including shootings at a council member’s home in Indianapolis and an attempted arson and murder charge against a Texas student targeting OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s residence.

Globally, media and social platforms compare this movement to 19th-century neo-Luddite uprisings against industrialization. Philosophical and scientific warnings, such as those from AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton, who estimates a 10-20% risk of AI causing human extinction, and philosopher Eliezer Yudkowsky’s cautionary thought experiments, heavily influence activists’ existential fears.

Unlike past technological controversies, the rapid advancement of large language models and autonomous systems leaves little time for structured political response. While authorities continue investigating Kirshner’s disappearance, last seen near Merced, California, anti-AI groups are attempting to soften their public image by staging peaceful demonstrations during the high-profile Elon Musk vs. Sam Altman federal court case in Oakland. Meanwhile, rationalist and effective altruism communities in Silicon Valley remain deeply anxious about the future implications of AI development.

Read the original at Ynet
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