Business · Ars Technica
It’s more a question of what it would do, if anything,” one current employee tells WIRED
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While internal tensions within Palantir have grown over the last year, they reached a boiling point in January after the violent killing of Alex Pretti, a nurse who was shot and killed by federal agents during protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Minneapolis.
Key facts
- Palantir was founded—with initial venture capital investment from the CIA—at a moment of national consensus following the September 11, 2001, attacks, when many saw fighting terrorism abroad — This was rogue,” a PCL employee who worked on the ICE contract said in a February AMA, a recording of which was obtained by WIRED
- Palantir’s leadership incensed workers yet again this week after the company posted a Saturday afternoon manifesto reducing Karp’s recent book, The Technological Republic, to 22 points
- While internal tensions within Palantir have grown over the last year, they reached a boiling point in January after the violent killing of Alex Pretti, a nurse who was shot and killed by federal
Summary
It took a few months of President Donald Trump’s second term for Palantir employees to question their company’s commitments to civil liberties. Around that time, two former employees reconnected by phone. “That was their greeting,” the other former employee says. Palantir was founded—with initial venture capital investment from the CIA—at a moment of national consensus following the September 11, 2001, attacks, when many saw fighting terrorism abroad as the most critical mission facing the US. For the past 20 years, employees could accept the intense external criticism and awkward conversations with family and friends about working for a company named after J.