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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe 2026 farm bill quietly hands big tech control over American farmland. Here's the fine print
https://fortune.com/2026/03/14/farm-bill-2026-big-tech-ai-precision-agriculture-eqip-subsidy/*snip*
A Farm Bill Cycle Like No Others
A quick review of the current House version of the Farm Bill doesnt reveal anything too unusual. The legislations 11 titles is the same number as what was in the law back in 2018. Still, how precision agriculture appears in the Conservation Title should raise some eyebrows.
Not only is precision agriculture defined, but it is complemented by a list of what are deemed appropriate technologies, including GPS, yield monitors, data management software, and the particularly strange sounding, Internet of Things and telematics technologies.
That last bizarre phrase, which most would probably consider a typo, is actually a concept that abounds in tech company circles. One definition from an industry leader notes that the Internet of Things, or IoT, is the network of physical objects things that are embedded with sensors, software, and other technologies for the purpose of connecting and exchanging data with other devices and systems.
Paired with this definition is the government opening the way for corporations to have, well, a field day with precision agriculture, including for AI. Tucked away in the Rural Development Title, is the promoting precision agriculture subsection. AI, we are told particularly, is to be guided by private sector-led interconnectivity standards, guidelines, and best practices.
How Taxpayers Would Subsidize Big Techs Entry Into Farming
This language lays the groundwork for the Farm Bill to funnel taxpayer dollars to make AI an integral part of our food and farm system. Specifically, for farmers who adopt precision agriculture as part of conservation practices, particularly through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), they will be reimbursed for 90% of the cost. This exceeds the normal percentage of what is provided by EQIP cost-share grants, which usually max out at 75% of what a farmer spends on practices like setting up a greenhouse or improving their irrigation system.
*snip*
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The 2026 farm bill quietly hands big tech control over American farmland. Here's the fine print (Original Post)
Nevilledog
12 hrs ago
OP
Stargazer99
(3,508 posts)1. the public will pay dearly
2naSalit
(102,261 posts)2. Yikes.
Initech
(108,591 posts)3. The rich get richer and we get screwed. We need a revolution against Murdoch's clowns now.