Oculus Founder Palmer Luckey Is Working on a Defense Startup

It’s been a brief, strange journey for Palmer Luckey, the founder of Oculus VR, the virtual reality shop that Facebook acquired in 2014 for $2 billion. With a deal like that, 24-year-old Luckey seemed like a star member of the next generation of young tech startup founders alongside Snap CEO Evan Spiegel, 27, and perhaps Patrick and John Collison, 28 and 26 respectively, the Irish brothers behind the San Francisco payments company Stripe.

(You know the tech industry moves quickly when Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, 33, is the establishment.)

But Luckey’s fall from grace was swift. At the end of last year he was revealed to have donated heavily to the then-unlikely presidential campaign of Donald Trump (as well as organizations spreading anti-Hillary Clinton Internet memes), hobbies that stood in sharp contrast to most of his Silicon Valley peers. Earlier this year he unceremoniously left the company, only to later find himself in a courtroom defending his former company’s intellectual property.

A New York Times report published Sunday shows that Luckey has been busy indeed. The entrepreneur has a new company in development, one that is “developing surveillance technology that could be deployed on borders between countries and around military bases,” according to the Times. The company is not yet public--the Times taps anonymous sources for the otherwise confidential information--but Luckey confirmed that it exists. “We need a new kind of defense company, one that will save taxpayer dollars while creating superior technology to keep our troops and citizens safer,” he told the Times in a statement.

What the company will actually create and sell remains elusive, but the Times notes that the investment fund run by co-founder, Trump darling, and erstwhile media industry opponent Peter Thiel “planned to support the effort.”

“Some people want founders to keep their politics private and away from their business, others think they should do everything out in the open in a vocal way,” Luckey wrote last month in a Reddit comment on an article about Steve Wozniak. “You can’t make everyone happy.”

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