Two years after leaving Facebook's Oculus to start a company building a virtual wall on the southern border, Palmer Luckey is set to score big. His new venture, Anduril Industries, is being valued at more than $1 billion in a new fundraising round, according to people familiar with the matter.

Anduril's latest financing includes capital from Andreessen Horowitz, said the people, who asked not to be named because the details of the round are still confidential. Anduril's border control technology includes towers with cameras and infrared sensors that use artificial intelligence to track movement. It's been deployed in Texas and Southern California.

Representatives from Anduril and Andreessen Horowitz didn't provide comments for this story.

As Anduril grows, it's loading up on Facebook DNA. Marc Andreessen, co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, sits on the social network's board alongside Peter Thiel, whose Founders Fund previously invested in Anduril. Luckey started the company after being fired from Facebook in 2017 amid controversy surrounding his political contributions and financial support of far-right groups and internet trolls.

Facebook acquired Oculus, which makes virtual reality headsets, for $2 billion in 2014. Andreessen Horowitz also invested in Oculus.

Luckey is jumping into a market for defense contracts that employees at some of Silicon Valley's biggest companies are rejecting. Last year, Google said it would not renew a Pentagon contract, called Project Maven, after several thousand employees signed a petition urging CEO Sundar Pichai to keep Google out of the "business of war" and dozens resigned in protest. Meanwhile, employees at Salesforce protested the software company's contract to sell software to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and employees at Microsoft spoke out against a deal with the military to provide augmented reality headsets.