Who is Palmer Luckey? | What You Need to Know About Oculus VR Founder – Capital.com

Scan to Download iOS&Android APP
By Mensholong Lepcha
Edited by Vanessa Kintu
11:30, 7 December 2022
Palmer Luckey is one of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs. Luckey co-founded virtual reality (VR) headset company Oculus VR as a 20-year old in 2012. He has since left Oculus and co-founded defence technology company Anduril Industries.
What is the story behind the Oculus Rift founder? Why is his latest company marred in controversy? Let’s find out.
Palmer Luckey is an American entrepreneur who founded virtual reality headset company Oculus VR. The Oculus founder sold his company to Facebook in March 2014 in a cash-plus-stock deal worth about $2bn.
According to TechCrunch, Luckey launched Oculus VR with the help of a Kickstarter campaign. The company was sold to Facebook 601 days from its initial fund raising campaign. Luckey continued to work at Oculus VR under Facebook until April 2017, where he launched VR gaming headset Oculus Rift.
The creator of Oculus Rift left Facebook to start a defence technology company called Anduril Industries in 2017. 
Luckey also founded an online forum called ModRetro, which contains discussions on gaming, software, computers and electronic projects. 
Palmer Luckey’s net worth was reported to be $1.3bn as of July 2022, according to Forbes.
More recently, the Oculus inventor revealed that he was “halfway to making” a gaming VR headset that will kill its user if they die in the game. In a November 2022 blog, he wrote:
Bullish Bearish
98% 2%
You voted bullish.
You voted bearish.
Give PLTR a try
Anduril Industries is a defence technology company that focuses on software engineering and computing to create military solutions. It is headquartered in Costa Mesa, California, US.
The company was founded in 2017 by Luckey, Brian Schimpf, Trae Stephens, Matt Grimm and Joseph Chen. Schimpf is CEO, Stephens the executive chairman and Grimm the chief operating officer. The trio were formerly employees at New York-listed defence contractor Palantir Technologies (PLTR). 
According to Andruil’s website, military veterans make up more than 20% of Andruil’s team. Co-founder Chen served as a paratrooper in the US Army National Guard.
The company’s flagship software offering is the Lattice OS, an autonomous “sense-making and command & control platform”. The software detects, tracks and classifies every object of interest in an operator’s vicinity, read the company’s website.
Andruil also has hardware solutions like artificial intelligence (AI) -powered drone Ghost, deep-water explorer Dive-LD and autonomous aerial defence system Counter UAS. According to its website, it has supported operations of the US Department of Defense, the US Department of Homeland Security, the Australian Defence Force and the UK Ministry of Defense.
In December, Andruil completed a funding round, which valued the defence tech company at $8.48bn. The company announced that it raised $1.48bn in a Series E funding that nearly doubled its previous valuation from June 2021. 
AMZN
TSLA
AAPL
XPEV
The funding round was led by Valor Equity Partners with participation from Founders Fund, a venture capital firm with Andruil co-founder Stephens as a partner.
Peter Theil, venture capitalist and co-founder of PayPal and Palantir Technologies, is also a partner at Founders Fund. Other participating investors included Andreessen Horowitz, General Catalyst, Lux Capital, 8VC, WCM Investment Management and US Innovative Technology Fund.
Andruil said the new funding will accelerate research and development of autonomous defence capabilities to the market and help scale business lines with the US Department of Defense and allies.
Anduril announced in July that it would be partnering with Palantir Technologies to develop the US Army’s Tactical Intelligence Targeting Access Node (TITAN) prototype. Palantir will lead a team of contractors with Anduril leading the hardware development of the prototype.
According to the press release, TITAN is an expeditionary intelligence ground station for long-range precision fires.
Anduril was awarded a 10-year contract worth $967m to be the US Special Operations Command’s Systems Integration Partner for counter-UAS technology.
In February 2022, the company acquired autonomous underwater vehicles start-up Dive Technologies for an undisclosed fee.
Anduril expanded to Australia in 2022 and signed a manufacturing contract worth $100m for extra-large autonomous undersea vehicles with the Royal Australian Navy.
The company has grown its team from 700 at the start of 2022 to more than 1,100 employees by December 2022.
Anduril’s journey has not been short of controversy. The company was criticised for using its surveillance technology to aid former US President Donald Trump’s US-Mexico border agenda. According to The Guardian, Palmer Luckey has donated to a pro-Trump organisation while company backer Thiel is known to be a Trump supporter.
Trump’s agenda to build a wall on the southern border of the US to prevent illegal border crossings from Mexico was a topic of conflict during his tenure as president. Instead of a physical barrier, a layer of digital surveillance wall is being built along several parts of the border.
In July 2020, The Washington Post reported that the Trump administration awarded Anduril a five-year contract to deploy solar-powered surveillance towers, which were able to autonomously identify humans, animals and vehicles. The surveillance towers would then send the imagery to the US Border Patrol to make final determination on the item detected. 
Reports from the US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) showed autonomous surveillance towers were piloted in early 2018 with four towers in the San Diego Border Patrol Sector and a further 200 towers were on course to be deployed by 2022.
Veronica Escobar, a member of the US Congress, expressed concern over the CBP’s “digital border wall” in an August 2022 letter to House speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Escobar called the surveillance technology “inhumane” and cited a study that pointed to border surveillance technologies being “a significant factor contributing to increased death rates among migrants crossing the border”.
According to the letter, the CBP received over $743m for border surveillance technologies between fiscal years 2017 and 2020, while the CBP’s border surveillance tech budget for fiscal 2022 was “one of the largest fiscal year amounts in recent years” at $425m.
Luckey shared his interest for “making things” in a 2013 interview with Eurogamer:
“I’m a self-taught engineer, a hacker, a maker, an electronics enthusiast. I’m from Long Beach, California. I like making things.”
Facebook bought Oculus VR in March 2014 in a cash-plus-stock deal worth about $2bn.
Palmer Luckey’s net worth was reported to be $1.3bn, as of July 2022, according to Forbes.
Rate this article
Rate this article:
Share this article
Comment
Rate this article
Rate this article:
Share this article
There are currently no responses for this story.
Be the first to respond.
Most traded
Most traded
Most traded
Most traded
Most traded
Most traded
Join the 475.000+ traders worldwide that chose to trade with Capital.com
Also you can contact us: call +44 20 8089 7893 support@capital.com
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 87.41% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. Risk Disclosure Statement
The value of shares and ETFs bought through a share dealing account can fall as well as rise, which could mean getting back less than you originally put in. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Risk warning: сonducting operations with non-deliverable over-the-counter instruments are a risky activity and can bring not only profit but also losses. The size of the potential loss is limited to the funds held by us for and on your behalf, in relation to your trading account. Past profits do not guarantee future profits. Use the training services of our company to understand the risks before you start operations.
Capital Com SV Investments Limited is regulated by Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) under license number 319/17. Capital Com SV Investments Limited, company Registration Number: 354252, registered address: 28 Octovriou 237, Lophitis Business Center II, 6th floor, 3035, Limassol, Cyprus.  
Start trading on PLTR now.

source

Leave a Comment