State Department Urges Silicon Valley to Aid National Security Effort: https://archive.ph/SXpc5
Datapoint 1: Posts about Palmer Luckey and his defense company go nowhere. Before Anduril, Luckey was the man most responsible for getting VR off the ground at Oculus.
https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&query=palmer%20luckey&sort=byDate&type=story
Datapoint 2: Google Employees Resign in Protest Against Pentagon Contract
https://gizmodo.com/google-employees-resign-in-protest-against-pentagon-con-1825729300
Much respect to those who serve, but their corrupt political leaders have misused their sacrifices for greed and profit, not country.
- most of us have never had exposure to it first-hand
- most of us don't even know anyone that works in defense, so nothing second-hand either
- most of us had zero exposure to it anytime in our education
- seemingly very few technologists in the space are prolific bloggers or podcasters so glimpses into that world is not something we'd normally stumble across.
So it's like a reverse Bike Shed dynamic. It's hard to have rigorous conversation or opinions on something we have so little insights to.
"Why is Hacker News not interested in Ethiopian mating ceremonies?" might be a good comparison.
Is it really? Why so?
Note: I'm not asking why national defense is important, but why it's increasingly important. That is, why is it any more important today than yesterday, or 5 years ago, or 15 years ago, or 35 years ago...
TLDR: in startupland, everyone wants to get rich quick from their bedroom. It's mostly not feasible when selling things to the millitary.
Per former POTUS Obama in the 2016 State of the Union:
"The United States of America is the most powerful nation on Earth. Period. It's not even close. We spend more on our military than the next eight nations combined. Our troops are the finest fighting force in the history of the world. No nation dares to attack us or our allies because they know that's the path to ruin."
https://www.npr.org/2016/01/12/462831088/president-obama-sta...
There's a lot to unpack there. I trust you can manage it without my intervention. But for the most part, anyone responsible would be suspect of any MIC-driven narrative at this point. And rightfully so.
I'd add, anecdotally, the DOD and the Intelligence Community share enough of the same DNA to fear that today's "defense technology" becomes tomorrow'w at-home surveillance state.
Again, it's not the lack of interest per se. It's that HN tends to have a different set of priorities.
In the case of defense it seems to be a matter of who you know instead of what you know. In the adjacent aerospace field, for instance, boondoggles like this
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Launch_System
are widespread and somehow the people involved can't see it the way that the rest of us see it -- that is, $23 billion spent on that is something we couldn't spend on something else and is a reason why "we can't have nice things". I managed to hear a significant amount of gossip about a program that a 3 letter agency decided to pursue with EADS despite EADS having no familiarity with the technology involved and being frankly completely lost about how to proceed.
There is a hermetic culture of people involved in defense contracting who, I think, just don't see the barriers involved. You, for instance, received a security clearance when you served in the Navy. For a small company getting security clearances for workers who don't already have them could seem next to impossible.
Defense tech skews fairly conservative. You may be underselling Luckey's talent, he single-handedly created the VR industry! But his weird obsession with the border and other political hot topics makes his company very un-fun to talk about. Even if you are fairly conservative but libertarian leaning, you may find empowering government agencies to police (or harm!) civilians is unpalatable for a lot of people.
Seconding on that, a lot of defense technology is used in immigration enforcement. Tech is an immigrant-heavy sector. Working for defense tech can often require security clearance only a small segment the programming community is even eligible for.
But more than anything, I think the kind of work most programmers could do in defense technology is going to be largely unfun. Building guns and planes and space lasers is cool. But being part of government procured code is not. There is not going to be much glamour, or insight to share (if you were even allowed to share about it).
Is it? How? Who's planning on attacking the US?
I do see lots of posts about planes though and space rockets.
On principle I'll never work for a company which by definition is equally both sides of the coin.
I like the fact HN doesn't discuss topics in this industry.
Anything that's not advanced enough to be Classified is too well known and boring to bother writing articles about.