The Weaponization of Computer Vision: Tracing Military-Surveillance Ties through Conference Sponsorship
Noa Garcia, Amelia Katirai

TL;DR
This paper investigates how computer vision research is linked to military and surveillance uses by analyzing conference sponsorships, revealing that nearly half of sponsors have direct ties to weaponization applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dataset of conference sponsors to study military and surveillance connections in computer vision research, highlighting the weaponization potential.
Findings
44% of sponsors have direct military or surveillance ties
Conference sponsorship can reveal weaponization of computer vision technologies
Case studies demonstrate sponsorship as a tool for uncovering weaponization
Abstract
Computer vision, a core domain of artificial intelligence (AI), is the field that enables the computational analysis, understanding, and generation of visual data. Despite being historically rooted in military funding and increasingly deployed in warfare, the field tends to position itself as a neutral, purely technical endeavor, failing to engage in discussions about its dual-use applications. Yet it has been reported that computer vision systems are being systematically weaponized to assist in technologies that inflict harm, such as surveillance or warfare. Expanding on these concerns, we study the extent to which computer vision research is being used in the military and surveillance domains. We do so by collecting a dataset of tech companies with financial ties to the field's central research exchange platform: conferences. Conference sponsorship, we argue, not only serves as strong…
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