The timeline for these changes is accelerating. Interest in the underlying infrastructure moved from concept to early testing in 2025–2026, with major players including Google, SpaceX, and Blue Origin now exploring orbital data centers to support AI workloads. These companies are testing whether space-based computing—which offers abundant solar power and natural cooling—can reduce pressure on Earth's electrical grids while meeting surging demand for AI processing capacity. Startups like Starcloud are already running prototype hardware in orbit.
Attorneys should monitor two regulatory fronts. First, biometric collection and use in travel will trigger privacy and data-protection questions under state laws, GDPR, and emerging AI regulations. Second, the infrastructure race to support AI—including orbital computing—may prompt new licensing frameworks, spectrum allocation disputes, and liability questions around space-based systems. Travel companies and tech firms are moving faster than regulators on both fronts, creating exposure for early movers.