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, SpaceX’s Starlink business fundamentally changes its nature.
Previously, Starlink, used by Ukraine’s military, was essentially a global civilian internet service. Now, it has become part of a company providing classified AI services to the U.S. Department of Defense. In military terms, this shifts it from “civilian infrastructure” to “dual-use military asset.”
The risk is that Chinese military researchers have published over 60 papers detailing strategies to destroy or disable Starlink constellations, including anti-satellite weapons, drone swarms interference, cyberattacks on ground stations, and even disrupting its chip supply chain. When Starlink was just an internet service provider, these were mostly theoretical; but once it becomes part of U.S. military communications, these plans could move from paper to battlefield.
Imagine a tense Taiwan Strait scenario: Starlink would shift from a commercial platform to a high-value military target. What does this mean for SpaceX’s $12 billion annual Starlink revenue? The current market valuation seems not to fully account for the systemic risks posed by this geopolitical “upgrade.”
5. The “gray area” of data monitoring and the countdown of legal risks
According to contract details, the Pentagon’s AI system will access real-time data streams from X (formerly Twitter) to train models. X has over 600 million users, generating vast amounts of public statements, private interactions, and live updates.
This opens a potential “gray zone” of surveillance. In theory, the data is used for AI training, but once the pipeline is established, who can guarantee it won’t be used for unauthorized domestic protests, journalist tracking, or social network analysis? Organizations like the ACLU could file lawsuits. Once litigation begins, that seemingly stable $200 million government contract could instantly become embroiled in political and judicial storms, with revenues uncertain.
Additionally, the timing of the IPO is also suspicious. Securities law states that lawsuits for IPO fraud must be filed within two years of discovering the fraud or within five years of the fraud occurrence. If key information (like the true nature of confidential income) is hidden at IPO in 2026 and only revealed in 2028-2029, the statute of limitations might start from 2026. When investors discover the issues, the window for legal recourse could be closed. This isn’t illegal but a savvy legal strategy, implying the legal team has prepared for potential “problem disclosures” after IPO.
Conclusion: Are you buying “the future” or “dependence”?
Beneath the glamorous veneer of rockets and AI, the essence of the SpaceX-xAI merger is betting on the U.S. government’s permanent, comprehensive dependence on a company in launch, satellite, communication, and AI fields. This dependence is so deep that even if security issues arise, regulators might hesitate to impose sanctions.
“Too big to fail” doesn’t mean “good investment.” Governments won’t let critical infrastructure collapse, but that doesn’t prevent stocks from plunging 50% due to $25 billion asset impairments, congressional investigations canceling contracts, or satellites being shot down amid geopolitical conflicts.
This IPO is likely to succeed because Starlink has real revenue, the Pentagon needs SpaceX, and institutional investors are accustomed to defense contractor confidentiality. But “going public” doesn’t necessarily mean “worthy of investment.” Boeing is vital to national defense, yet its stock has not fully recovered from the 737 MAX crisis.
Ultimately, this $1.25 trillion deal demands investors pay for unverified space tech, potentially obsolete ground assets, questionable government contracts, unverifiable secret income, and unpriced geopolitical risks. Musk may once again create a miracle, but before signing this “mortgage,” every investor should realize: the rooms locked by law may contain not only treasures but also unforeseen challenges. Seeing clearly the path beneath your feet is just as important as chasing the future.