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The Trump administration’s approach to immigration has reached a level of violence that the tech industry cannot ignore. In 2026 so far, federal immigration agents have been murdered At least eight peopleincluding at least two US citizens in Minneapolis – Rene Judd and Alex Peretti. As immigration enforcement becomes more extreme, even… Detention of school children Seeking legal recourse – Tech workers called on their leaders to speak up.
The technology industry has long been entangled in politics. Companies like Palantir, Clearview AI, Flock, and Paragon are as well contracted before US Immigration and Customs Enforcement assists in the agency’s crackdowns. But as President Trump took office last year, his connections in the industry grew. Elon Musk has been running a government agency for months, and David Sachs, the prolific Silicon Valley investor, chairs a technology advisory board to the president. The CEOs behind some of the country’s biggest companies — such as Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook and Google’s Sundar Pichai — held key seats at Trump’s inauguration and have remained aligned with him.
“We know our industry leaders have influence: In October, they convinced Trump to cancel a planned ICE surge in San Francisco.” ICEout.techa group of tech industry workers who oppose ICE, wrote in a statement on January 24, ICU Nurse Day. Alex Prettydeath. The statement added: “The CEOs of major technology companies are at the White House tonight,” referring to the screening of a documentary about Melania Trump, where He cooksAmazon’s Andy Jassy and Zoom’s Eric Yuan were in attendance. “Now they must go further and join us in demanding that ICE leave all of our cities.”
Since then, some of the biggest players in tech have spoken out, to a mixed reception from their employees and the industry. Below, we keep a running list of what technology leaders have said.
LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, a major Democratic donor, published an article Editorial In the San Francisco Standard on January 29, calling on Silicon Valley to stop trying to be neutral in the wake of the killings in Minnesota.
“We in Silicon Valley cannot bow to Trump,” Hoffman wrote. “We cannot stand back and just hope the crisis goes away. We now know that hope without action is not a strategy — but an invitation for Trump to trample everything he can see, including our business and security interests.”
He said he was encouraged to see more tech leaders speaking out, saying, “It’s a good start for something America needs a lot more of right now.”
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“Whichever candidates you’ve supported in the past — or even if you (like many of my friends in Silicon Valley) don’t typically do politics — you almost certainly didn’t want to.” this“, books.
OpenAI’s CEO was Sam Altman He opposed publicly Trump’s policies during his first term, but he changed his tune in the new administration as his company closed deals to develop artificial intelligence infrastructure for the US government, including a whopping $500 billion. Stargate project.
In the days following Preeti’s death, Altman addressed OpenAI employees in an internal Slack message, which was I mentioned before New York Times.
“What’s happening with ICE is overblown. There’s a big difference between deporting violent criminals and what’s happening now, and we need to make the distinction properly,” he said. He added: “President Trump is a very strong leader, and I hope he will rise to this moment and unite the country.”
“We didn’t get so woke when that was popular, we didn’t start talking about corporate masculine energy when that was popular, and we’re not going to make a lot of performative statements now about safety or politics or anything else,” Altman added. “But we’re going to keep trying to figure out how to do the right thing as best we can.”
In an interview with NBC, broadcaster Tom Lamas Dario Amodei asked On his views on defense in relation to current events. The broadcaster noted that Anthropic has a contract with the US Department of Defense, and has partnered with Palantir – which supplied technology to ICE – on projects for that agency.
First, Amodei reiterated that Anthropic does not have any contracts with ICE, despite its relationship with the Department of Defense, and stressed his concern about “the need to protect democracies against authoritarian regimes” such as China and Russia.
“I am a strong believer in the need to arm democracies, carefully, in order to defend against these countries,” Amodei said, adding that these values still exist in the context of domestic American politics.
“We have to be really careful about making sure that democracies are worth defending,” he said. “We need to defend our democratic values at home.” “I think some of the things we’ve seen in the last few days have me concerned about that.”
He also mentioned ICE raids in Minneapolis in a mail On X, where he noted “the horror we see in Minnesota.”
Apple CEO addressed employees at Internal memo On January 27:
“This is a time to calm down,” Cook said. He later added: “I had a good conversation with the president this week where I shared my views, and I appreciate his openness to engage on issues that matter to us all.”
Like the tech industry insiders behind ICEout.tech, Signal President Meredith Whitaker has been outspoken about the role tech leaders play in social justice.
“I want all the tech workers who have ever sang about freedom, or their love of privacy, or their commitment to freedom, to join me in unequivocal condemnation,” Whitaker said. books On X.
“Masked US state agents are executing people in the streets and powerful leaders are openly lying to cover them up,” she said in another post. “To everyone in my industry who has ever claimed to value freedom – rely on the courage of your convictions and stand up.”
As an end-to-end encrypted messaging app, Signal is often used by activists to organize community actions.
Tony Stubblebine, leader of online publishing platform Medium, posted screenshots on Threads of a message Share with employees an explanation of why employees are allowed to participate in a A nationwide general strike If they choose, although he made clear that he is “not in the business of dictating people’s policies.”
“I started the week with my mind and heart in mind because of what I was seeing in Minneapolis, really struggling with the idea that these two murders were just the tip of the icy iceberg of wrongdoing,” Stubblebine wrote.
In the note, he wrote about the difficulty of navigating his role as CTO during this time, saying it was “awkward to navigate between being on mission and on capital.” He added that he considers “the company’s responsibility to clarify its position, especially since many other technology organizations are donating to the Trump campaign and supporting the current administration’s agenda.”
Stubblebine also noted that Medium’s approach to its role as a web publisher reflects the company’s larger values — “for example, that we don’t allow things like hate content or racial slurs on Medium.”
Jeff Dean spoke about his reaction to the killings in Minnesota.
“This is so shameful,” Dean said books On X, in response to a video of federal agents shooting Alex Pretti. “Agents of a federal agency needlessly escalate and then execute an unarmed citizen whose crime appears to be using his cell phone camera. Every person regardless of political affiliation should condemn this.”
James Dett posted on X about what he sees as hypocrisy in the tech industry.
“There is far more anger from tech leaders over the wealth tax than there is from masked ICE agents terrorizing communities and executing civilians in the streets,” said Dyette. He said. “It tells you what you need to know about the values of our industry.”
While Khosla Ventures partner Keith Rabois has publicly expressed support for ICE and the Trump administration’s practices, others at the firm have publicly disagreed with those views.
Rabois made inflammatory comments on X after Border Patrol agents killed ICU nurse Alex Pretty in Minneapolis, prompting one of the founders to… To answer that And that if he were a founder in Khosla Ventures’ portfolio, he would return the money, describing Rabois as “embarrassing”.
Ethan Choi, another partner at Khosla Ventures, He responded to the publication to clarify that not everyone at the company agrees with Rabois’s views. “I want to be clear that Keith does not represent the opinions of everyone here at Khosla Ventures, at least not mine.” booksHe added: “What happened in Minnesota is clearly wrong. I don’t know how you can really see it differently. It’s sad to see someone’s life taken needlessly.”
Vinod Khosla, the company’s founder, retweeted Choi’s message and described the federal agents as “macho ICE guards running amok backed by clueless management.”
“The video was disgusting to watch and the narration without facts or with fake facts fabricated by the authorities was almost unthinkable in a civilized society,” Khosla said. books. “ICE agents must have ice water running through their veins to be able to treat other human beings this way. There is politics but humanity has to go beyond that.”
Khosla also posted on X that he agrees with Huffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn, that more tech executives should speak out against the Trump administration.