Security and surveillance increasingly employ artificial intelligence for threat detection, behavior analysis, and access control. This transformation affects security workers while raising privacy and civil liberties concerns, creating tensions between efficiency, employment, and rights.
Data indicates 60% of jobs in wealthy nations and 40% globally will be affected by AI. Security positions likely see significant impacts as AI monitors facilities and detects threats. Some security professionals appear among the approximately 10% using AI to enhance capabilities, though routine monitoring positions face automation.
Young workers traditionally entered security work through entry-level guard positions requiring minimal formal education. As AI surveillance systems handle monitoring, these accessible entry points may diminish. This affects employment pathways for workers without advanced credentials.
Experienced security workers built careers in monitoring and threat assessment that AI systems can now partially replicate. While complex security situations require human judgment, routine monitoring increasingly falls to AI. This changes the nature and volume of security employment.
Governance of security AI involves privacy protections, civil liberties, and accuracy in threat detection alongside employment concerns. Labor issues often receive less attention than privacy debates. International cooperation on security AI faces challenges from national security concerns and varying privacy standards, though some threats suggest value in collaboration.