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Palantir Issues Ominous Corporate Manifesto

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Why This Matters

Palantir's recent manifesto reveals a concerning vision for the future of technology and security, emphasizing hard power and nationalistic ideals that raise ethical and societal questions. This development highlights ongoing debates about the role of AI and surveillance in shaping authoritarian tendencies and the potential risks to civil liberties in the tech industry. Consumers and industry stakeholders should remain vigilant about the implications of such powerful technologies being aligned with controversial political ideologies.

Key Takeaways

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Military and intelligence contractor Palantir has long struggled to beat the allegations of enabling an Orwellian surveillance state on behalf of the Pentagon.

The Alex Karp-led company has received huge sums in federal funding to build out a surveillance platform for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, along with countless other contracts for military operations, policing, and border enforcement — not just with the US, but the Israeli military and UK government as well.

Just in case its broader mission to supercharge national security using cutting-edge spying was too opaque, Karp penned a 320-page tome titled “The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West.” While the book itself was released just over 14 months ago, a 22-point summary the company tweeted over the weekend put the firm and its controversial CEO’s ominous worldview in stark relief, drawing shocked reactions.

Belgian philosopher of technology Mark Coeckelbergh described the manifesto as an “example of technofascism,” while Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis warned that “AI-powered killer robots are coming” in his reading of Palantir’s “hideous ideology.” Engadget pointed out that the summary “reads like the ramblings of a comic book villain” — and we can’t help but agree.

It doesn’t take long for the red flags to shoot up. Karp calls for national service to be a “universal duty,” and for the undoing of the “postwar neutering of Germany and Japan.” He also calls for “hard power” at the expense of “moral appeal,” and opines that people shouldn’t “look to the political arena to nourish their soul and sense of self.”

Meanwhile, it calls for the “West” to shed any sense of “inclusivity,” by resisting the “shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism,” closely echoing the far-right’s repeated calls to end what it calls “woke” — essentially inclusive and anti-discriminatory — beliefs. (As such, Karp told investors in November that Palantir is the “first company to be completely anti-woke.”)

The book also argues that the new world order will inevitably be determined by software and AI-driven warfare, and that “violent crime” needs to be solved by Silicon Valley itself. (In reality, violent crime has been falling for decades.)

It’s a terrifyingly unambiguous rendition of Karp’s worldview that, given his reputation as the “scariest CEO in the world,” shouldn’t come as much of a surprise. From supporting deportations carried out by ICE to developing software for autonomous strike drones that’s being used in Iran to select targets, he and his company have long been shrouded in controversy.

Meanwhile, even former employees often struggle to explain what the Peter Thiel-cofounded software firm actually does, as Wired reported last year.

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