Close Menu
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud & AI
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contact

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest technology news from TechFinancials News about FinTech, Tech, Business, Telecoms and Connected Life.

What's Hot

Digitap ($TAP) Crushes NexChain with Real Banking Utility: Best Crypto to Buy in 2026

2026-02-07

Football Fans Can Share Their ‘Super Bowl Spread’  With The Chance To Win an NFL Jersey

2026-02-07

Why Traditional Banks Need Mobile Money Solutions to Survive the Next 5 Years

2026-02-07
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Digitap ($TAP) Crushes NexChain with Real Banking Utility: Best Crypto to Buy in 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
TechFinancials
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud & AI
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contact
TechFinancials
Home»Trending News»DOGE Threat: Government Data Grants AI Firm Extraordinary Power
Trending News

DOGE Threat: Government Data Grants AI Firm Extraordinary Power

Allison StangerBy Allison Stanger2025-03-07No Comments7 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Elon Musk
Elon Musk has simultaneous control of DOGE and his AI company xAI. AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

The Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, has secured unprecedented access to at least seven sensitive federal databases, including those of the Internal Revenue Service and Social Security Administration. This access has sparked fears about cybersecurity vulnerabilities and privacy violations. Another concern has received far less attention: the potential use of the data to train a private company’s artificial intelligence systems.

The White House press secretary said government data that DOGE has collected isn’t being used to train Musk’s AI models, despite Elon Musk’s control over DOGE. However, evidence has emerged that DOGE personnel simultaneously hold positions with at least one of Musk’s companies.

At the Federal Aviation Administration, SpaceX employees have government email addresses. This dual employment creates a conduit for federal data to potentially be siphoned to Musk-owned enterprises, including xAI. The company’s latest Grok AI chatbot model conspicuously refuses to give a clear denial about using such data.

As a political scientist and technologist who is intimately acquainted with public sources of government data, I believe this potential transmission of government data to private companies presents far greater privacy and power implications than most reporting identifies. A private entity with the capacity to develop artificial intelligence technologies could use government data to leapfrog its competitors and wield massive influence over society.

Value of government data for AI

For AI developers, government databases represent something akin to finding the Holy Grail. While companies such as OpenAI, Google and xAI currently rely on information scraped from the public internet, nonpublic government repositories offer something much more valuable: verified records of actual human behavior across entire populations.

This isn’t merely more data – it’s fundamentally different data. Social media posts and web browsing histories show curated or intended behaviors, but government databases capture real decisions and their consequences. For example, Medicare records reveal health care choices and outcomes. IRS and Treasury data reveal financial decisions and long-term impacts. And federal employment and education statistics reveal education paths and career trajectories.

What makes this data particularly valuable for AI training is its longitudinal nature and reliability. Unlike the disordered information available online, government records follow standardized protocols, undergo regular audits and must meet legal requirements for accuracy. Every Social Security payment, Medicare claim and federal grant creates a verified data point about real-world behavior. This data exists nowhere else with such breadth and authenticity in the U.S.

Most critically, government databases track entire populations over time, not just digitally active users. They include people who never use social media, don’t shop online, or actively avoid digital services. For an AI company, this would mean training systems on the actual diversity of human experience rather than just the digital reflections people cast online.

a security guard holds out his arms as he stands in front of an older man in a business suit
A security guard prevented U.S. Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., from entering an EPA building on Feb. 6, 2025, to see DOGE staff working there.
Al Drago/Getty Images

The technical advantage

Current AI systems face fundamental limitations that no amount of data scraped from the internet can overcome. When ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini make mistakes, it’s often because they’ve been trained on information that might be popular but isn’t necessarily true. They can tell you what people say about a policy’s effects, but they can’t track those effects across populations and years.

Government data could change this equation. Imagine training an AI system not just on opinions about health care but on actual treatment outcomes across millions of patients. Consider the difference between learning from social media discussions about economic policies and analyzing their real impacts across different communities and demographics over decades.

A large, state-of-the-art, or frontier, model trained on comprehensive government data could understand the actual relationships between policies and outcomes. It could track unintended consequences across different population segments, model complex societal systems with real-world validation and predict the impacts of proposed changes based on historical evidence. For companies seeking to build next-generation AI systems, access to this data would create an almost insurmountable advantage.

Control of critical systems

A company like xAI could do far more with models trained on government data than building better chatbots or content generators. Such systems could fundamentally transform – and potentially control – how people understand and manage complex societal systems. While some of these capabilities could be beneficial under the control of accountable public agencies, I believe they pose a threat in the hands of a single private company.

Medicare and Medicaid databases contain records of treatments, outcomes and costs across diverse populations over decades. A frontier model trained on new government data could identify treatment patterns that succeed where others fail, and so dominate the health care industry. Such a model could understand how different interventions affect various populations over time, accounting for factors such as geographic location, socioeconomic status and concurrent conditions.

A company wielding the model could influence health care policy by demonstrating superior predictive capabilities and market population-level insights to pharmaceutical companies and insurers.

Treasury data represents perhaps the most valuable prize. Government financial databases contain granular details about how money flows through the economy. This includes real-time transaction data across federal payment systems, complete records of tax payments and refunds, detailed patterns of benefit distributions, and government contractor payments with performance metrics.

An AI company with access to this data could develop extraordinary capabilities for economic forecasting and market prediction. It could model the cascading effects of regulatory changes, predict economic vulnerabilities before they become crises, and optimize investment strategies with precision impossible through traditional methods.

Play
Elon Musk’s xAI company is well financed.

Infrastructure and urban systems

Government databases contain information about critical infrastructure usage patterns, maintenance histories, emergency response times and development impacts. Every federal grant, infrastructure inspection and emergency response creates a data point that could help train AI to better understand how cities and regions function.

The power lies in the potential interconnectedness of this data. An AI system trained on government infrastructure records would understand how transportation patterns affect energy use, how housing policies affect emergency response times, and how infrastructure investments influence economic development across regions.

A private company with exclusive access would gain unique insight into the physical and economic arteries of American society. This could allow the company to develop “smart city” systems that city governments would become dependent on, effectively privatizing aspects of urban governance. When combined with real-time data from private sources, the predictive capabilities would far exceed what any current system can achieve.

Absolute data corrupts absolutely

A company such as xAI, with Musk’s resources and preferential access through DOGE, could surmount technical and political obstacles far more easily than competitors. Recent advances in machine learning have also reduced the burdens of preparing data for the algorithms to process, making government data a veritable gold mine – one that rightfully belongs to the American people.

The threat of a private company accessing government data transcends individual privacy concerns. Even with personal identifiers removed, an AI system that analyzes patterns across millions of government records could enable surprising capabilities for making predictions and influencing behavior at the population level. The threat is AI systems that leverage government data to influence society, including electoral outcomes.

Since information is power, concentrating unprecedented data in the hands of a private entity with an explicit political agenda represents a profound challenge to the republic. I believe that the question is whether the American people can stand up to the potentially democracy-shattering corruption such a concentration would enable. If not, Americans should prepare to become digital subjects rather than human citizens.The Conversation

Allison Stanger, Distinguished Endowed Professor, Middlebury

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

AI DOGE Elon Musk
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Allison Stanger

Related Posts

South Africa Could Unlock SME Growth By Exploiting AI’s Potential Through Corporate ESD Funds

2026-01-28

The Final Day To Secure BlockDAG’s Projected 50x Climb Is Here: DOGE & XRP News Build Momentum

2026-01-27

How Local Leaders Can Shift Their Trajectory In 2026

2026-01-23

The Boardroom Challenge: Governing AI, Data And Digital

2026-01-20

Samson Mow Predicts Musk Buys BTC Late in 2026 But Digitap ($TAP) is the Best Crypto to Buy Today

2026-01-14

Volvo EX60 – It’s A Middle Finger To The Petrol Price

2026-01-09

ConvoGPT and Founder Jeremy David Announce ConvoGPT OS with Enterprise Partnership with ElevenLabs

2026-01-08

The Future Of Work – Skills, Not Fear – South Africa’s Path To An AI-Ready Workforce

2026-01-07

WeThinkCode_ Announces New CEO As It Enters Its Second Decade

2026-01-07
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

DON'T MISS
Breaking News

Digitap ($TAP) Crushes NexChain with Real Banking Utility: Best Crypto to Buy in 2026

The crypto presale market in 2026 has seen dozens of projects compete for investor attention.…

Dutch Entrepreneurial Development Bank FMO Invests R340M In Lula To Expand SME funding In SA

2026-02-03

Paarl Mall Gets R270M Mega Upgrade

2026-02-02

Huawei Says The Next Wave Of Infrastructure Investment Must Include People, Not Only Platforms

2026-01-21
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
OUR PICKS

Vodacom Reports Robust Q3 Growth, Driven By Diversification And Strategic Moves

2026-02-04

South Africa’s First Institutional Rand Stablecoin, ZARU, Launches

2026-02-03

The EX60 Cross Country: Built For The “Go Anywhere” Attitude

2026-01-23

Mettus Launches Splendi App To Help Young South Africans Manage Their Credit Health

2026-01-22

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news from TechFinancials about telecoms, fintech and connected life.

About Us

TechFinancials delivers in-depth analysis of tech, digital revolution, fintech, e-commerce, digital banking and breaking tech news.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit RSS
Our Picks

Digitap ($TAP) Crushes NexChain with Real Banking Utility: Best Crypto to Buy in 2026

2026-02-07

Football Fans Can Share Their ‘Super Bowl Spread’  With The Chance To Win an NFL Jersey

2026-02-07

Why Traditional Banks Need Mobile Money Solutions to Survive the Next 5 Years

2026-02-07
Recent Posts
  • Digitap ($TAP) Crushes NexChain with Real Banking Utility: Best Crypto to Buy in 2026
  • Football Fans Can Share Their ‘Super Bowl Spread’  With The Chance To Win an NFL Jersey
  • Why Traditional Banks Need Mobile Money Solutions to Survive the Next 5 Years
  • Spotify Brings Audiobooks to South Africa
  • Anjouan Corporate Services Reshapes Cross-Border Brokerage Licensing Strategy for UAE-Focused Firms
TechFinancials
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube WhatsApp
  • Homepage
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • About
© 2026 TechFinancials. Designed by TFS Media. TechFinancials brings you trusted, around-the-clock news on African tech, crypto, and finance. Our goal is to keep you informed in this fast-moving digital world. Now, the serious part (please read this): Trading is Risky: Buying and selling things like cryptocurrencies and CFDs is very risky. Because of leverage, you can lose your money much faster than you might expect. We Are Not Advisors: We are a news website. We do not provide investment, legal, or financial advice. Our content is for information and education only. Do Your Own Research: Never rely on a single source. Always conduct your own research before making any financial decision. A link to another company is not our stamp of approval. You Are Responsible: Your investments are your own. You could lose some or all of your money. Past performance does not predict future results. In short: We report the news. You make the decisions, and you take the risks. Please be careful.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.