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Blog.palantir. Throughout the pandemic, Palantir has provided technology to Fieldlab Zuid6, the “Safety Information Exchange Program” of the Netherlands’ six south safety regions. In this video, we show how Palantir software has helped the regions monitor the pandemic and measure their response efforts. Palantir powers a Covid-19 Common Operating Picture (COP) that integrates publicly accessible data from a range of sources, including demographic and economic information, traffic and mobility data, and Covid-19 data. This overview of the pandemic helps authorized team members support crisis response. For example, safety region directors and information managers are able to: Monitor the geographic distribution of Covid-19 cases in real time.Explore public mobility data to understand how response measures impact people’s movement.Analyze unexpected risk vectors, such as road works or weather that might cause crowding.Share discoveries and reports across regions. Watch the full video:

Blog.palantir. Governments around the world have begun using Palantir Foundry to accelerate their response to the COVID-19 pandemic. As we recently wrote on our blog, we believe data-driven approaches to crises must be grounded in a broader understanding of technology’s promises and limitations, including a focused regard for preserving societal values such as privacy and civil liberties.

Our enterprise platform, Palantir Foundry, is currently used by customers around the world to integrate data critical to combatting the COVID-19 crisis. In this post, we’ll describe in greater detail how our customers can do so in a secure and privacy-protective way. Palantir Foundry is a software platform that lets our customers integrate their data in a secure environment so everyone in the organization can use it to make decisions, with access controls that govern how users see and interact with data.

Bring compliance users into the platform. Identify the sensitive data that you most need to protect. All roads lead to Palantir. One name in tech has become embroiled in controversy: Palantir, a big-data analytics outfit. Palantir weren’t that well known in the UK until the Covid-19 pandemic, when they were thrust into the national spotlight after the UK Government granted them access to reportedly unprecedented quantities of NHS patient data for processing and analysis in response to the novel Coronavirus.

Palantir isn’t just working with the NHS, yet despite their extensive work with the government could potentially be dealing with some of the most sensitive personal data that exists, there has been a serious lack of transparency around these contracts. Find out more about what Palantir has been up to using our timeline. Public private partnerships, like the ones between many branches of the UK government and Palantir, can have a direct and life-altering impact on people’s lives. The work that governments do, and the services they deliver, are vital. Serious questions remain that must be answered: Key Findings.

Babylon and Palantir Make Rapid Progress in Developing One of the World’s Most Advanced Health Data Platforms. Palantir and STATION F Partner to Empower Early-Stage Companies. Cathie Wood just bought Palantir stock - should I buy too? - The Motley Fool UK. ARK Invest portfolio manager Cathie Wood is one of the biggest names in investing right now. As a result of her success with Tesla stock and Bitcoin, many investors are watching her moves closely. Recently, Wood bought data analytics company Palantir Technologies (NYSE: PLTR) for her ARK portfolios. This is a stock I covered in November. With Wood buying in, I feel it’s time to take another look at the investment case. 5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50 Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic… and with so many great companies trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times. We’re sharing the names in a special FREE investing report that you can download today. Click here to claim your free copy now! PLTR: risks. Israel-linked CIA-funded Palantir goes public, making espionage mainstream. The firm is closely linked to the CIA and Israel, while standing accused of multiple counts of human rights violations. Nearly two decades after the company was founded using a CIA investment, Palantir Technologies went public in a major stock market offering.

But in spite of the IPO, the company direction was already bought at birth by the CIA’s venture capital firm In-Q-Tel, which invests in companies that enhance its reach, power and capacity for espionage. While In-Q-Tel claims to be independent from the CIA, it only invests with CIA approval. For Peter Thiel, with an estimated net worth of about $22 billion, it’s been a profitable arrangement. For the CIA, data mining, computing and surveillance are the keys to the future, and that’s where Palantir comes in. The Myth Palantir first became notorious for stories that circulated alleging that the software it designed was responsible for finding Osama bin Laden. But what does Palantir do? Its sales pitch gives a lot away. How did they do it? Www.theregister. Comment Most people are aware of some things and not aware of other things. But UK health secretary Matt Hancock isn't sure if he's aware of something or not.

The "something" in question is whether there are links between Palantir, the controversial military-linked US analytics company, and Cambridge Analytica, the UK analytics company at the heart of the Facebook data scandal which worked with Donald Trump's campaign in the run-up to his 2016 election. It was posed by Dawn Butler, a Labour MP and member of the Parliamentary Science and Technology Committee, to which Hancock was giving evidence last week. The health sec was there to see if there were any lessons to be learned from the UK's management of the COVID-19 pandemic, which left the country with one of the highest death rates for the disease worldwide.

There are many, but they are for others to judge. Butler, however, touched on a subject we've been covering at The Reg for some years. "I'm not... erm... Peter Thiel’s Free Speech for Race Science Crusade at Cambridge University Revealed. In a special investigation, Nafeez Ahmed reveals how Palantir-linked Donald Trump lobbyists are using ‘free speech’ to normalise white nationalism on UK campuses A network of academics influencing Government policy on ‘free speech’ in universities is being steered by pro-Donald Trump lobbyists and donors linked to Republican billionaire venture capitalist Peter Thiel – the chairman and co-founder of CIA-backed data analytics giant Palantir Technologies, a special investigation by Byline Times can reveal.

Sources at Cambridge University have confirmed to Byline Times that the network of conservative academics – many of whom ended up mobilising around Toby Young’s Free Speech Union (FSU) and writing for Claire Lehmann’s Quillette magazine – has been supported from its inception by Peter Thiel’s top chief of staff. The network also includes organisations financed by Republican Party operatives and donors who support former US President Donald Trump. Jordan Peterson and The Bell Curve. Palantir filed to go public. The firm's unethical technology should horrify us | Marisa Franco. In 2017, the Trump administration first set its sights on a target it would return to repeatedly in the coming years: immigrant children. Thousands of kids were crossing the border alone, often seeking to reunify with families living in the United States. The journey is harrowing for children, but the alternative is life in a separated family – an easy choice for most parents, who often pay to bring their kids across.

But this presented officials with a question: how to implement the president’s anti-immigration campaign promises against child migrants? The answer was simple: go to the source by prosecuting and imprisoning their parents. Criminally charge the parents as smugglers, separate them from their families, and others would be dissuaded from bringing their children across, officials hoped.

The mechanism was equally simple: the Trump administration turned to Silicon Valley to map out the family relations of these children. Palantir is well known in the defense and policing worlds. US data giant Palantir is on a mission to seduce France’s start-ups. The US company Palantir, which specialises in data analytics and is known as one of the most secretive and controversial companies in the world, is on a mission to seduce French start-ups. On Thursday, the company announced a partnership with Station F, the world’s biggest start-up incubator based in Paris. The partnership will offer Europe’s start-ups access to its Foundry For Builders initiative, which will grant them access to Palantir's expertise in data through mentoring, workshops and events. It will work in the form of a subscription at a preferential rate. The goal is to help users see, understand and analyse their data. The platform also makes it possible to develop products and to use this tool as a brick of the final solution proposed by the company.

Championing Europe’s start-ups “We believe in French excellence and in European excellence,” Wiem Gharbi, chief of development at Palantir France, told Euronews Next. Security risk? The company also has its fingers in health data. FBI blooper allowed agents to use Palantir to see restricted material -letter. Palantir is not our friend - about:intel. Why Did Palantir Technologies Move Its Headquarters to Denver? On May 26 of this year, Alex Karp, the CEO of one of the world’s most powerful tech firms, hinted at perhaps the worst-kept secret in Silicon Valley: Palantir Technologies, a controversial data-mining company with contracts throughout the highest levels of the federal government, would soon be moving its headquarters out of Palo Alto, California.

As with most everything Palantir does, there was a twist. The company wouldn’t be shifting its operational base to New York City or Washington, D.C., where Palantir maintains offices and would have been in close proximity to some of its most prominent clients. “We haven’t picked a place yet,” Karp said in an interview that aired on HBO late that spring night. 5280 December 2020 Two days later, a manager from Denver’s Department of Economic Development & Opportunity (DEDO) pasted into an email a link to a news story that included Karp’s quote about Palantir’s possible move.

For Colorado, there was reason to act quickly. Seeing stones: pandemic reveals Palantir's troubling reach in Europe | Technology. The 24 March, 2020 will be remembered by some for the news that Prince Charles tested positive for Covid and was isolating in Scotland. In Athens it was memorable as the day the traffic went silent. Twenty-four hours into a hard lockdown, Greeks were acclimatising to a new reality in which they had to send an SMS to the government in order to leave the house.

As well as millions of text messages, the Greek government faced extraordinary dilemmas. The European Union’s most vulnerable economy, its oldest population along with Italy, and one of its weakest health systems faced the first wave of a pandemic that overwhelmed richer countries with fewer pensioners and stronger health provision. The carnage in Italy loomed large across the Adriatic. One Greek who did go into the office that day was Kyriakos Pierrakakis, the minister for digital transformation, whose signature was inked in blue on an agreement with the US technology company, Palantir.

Lord of the Rings mystique. How Big Data Turned Into Big Business for Cyber and Privacy Lawyers. Marcy Wilder walked into her boss’s corner office at law firm Hogan Lovells in 2010 with an idea that seems quaint in retrospect: Start a team dedicated to cybersecurity and privacy. Many companies at the time were only beginning to face the threat of cyberattacks, and the European Union hadn’t yet set off a global chain reaction of privacy laws.

Hogan Lovells didn’t issue a press release after it created the practice group, Ms. Wilder said, “because no one would have been interested.” Since then, her team has grown to about 85 lawyers amid a global boom in the field. “Times have changed,” said Ms. Wilder, who specializes in health privacy and co-leads Hogan Lovells’s privacy and cybersecurity practice. Newsletter Sign-up WSJ Pro Cybersecurity Cybersecurity news, analysis and insights from WSJ's global team of reporters and editors. The looming need for privacy pros—and attorneys in particular—brings to mind the iconic line from the 1975 thriller “Jaws,” said J. Technology Can’t Predict Crime, It Can Only Weaponize Proximity to Policing. Special thanks to Yael Grauer for additional writing and research. In June 2020, Santa Cruz, California became the first city in the United States to ban municipal use of predictive policing, a method of deploying law enforcement resources according to data-driven analytics that supposedly are able to predict perpetrators, victims, or locations of future crimes.

Especially interesting is that Santa Cruz was one of the first cities in the country to experiment with the technology when it piloted, and then adopted, a predictive policing program in 2011. That program used historic and current crime data to break down some areas of the city into 500 foot by 500 foot blocks in order to pinpoint locations that were likely to be the scene of future crimes. However, after nine years, the city council voted unanimously to ban it over fears of how it perpetuated racial inequality. Predictive policing is a self-fulfilling prophecy. What Is Predictive Policing? What Problems Does it Pose? The tech ‘solutions’ for coronavirus take the surveillance state to the next level | Evgeny Morozov.

In a matter of weeks, coronavirus has shuttered the global economy and placed capitalism in intensive care. Many thinkers have expressed hope that it will usher in a more humane economic system; others warn that the pandemic heralds a darker future of techno-totalitarian state surveillance. The dated cliches from the pages of 1984 are no longer a reliable guide to what is to come. And today’s capitalism is stronger – and weirder – than its critics imagine. Not only do its numerous problems present new avenues for profit-making, they also boost its legitimacy – since the only salvation will be dispensed by the likes of Bill Gates and Elon Musk. The worse its crises, the stronger its defences: this is definitely not how capitalism ends. However, the critics of capitalism are right to see Covid-19 as a vindication of their warnings. After decades of neoliberal policy, solutionism has become the default response to so many political problems. How so?

We are all solutionists now. Palantir is not a data company (Palantir Explained, #1) | by Palantir | Palantir Blog | Medium. Palantir has often been described as a secretive company. There is some truth to this. For many years, we primarily served institutions with exceptional confidentiality expectations in fields like defence and intelligence. We often had little choice but to remain silent about our work, even when misunderstandings about the nature of our business appeared in the media or in the public sphere. Now that we serve clients in a wider range of sectors, we have an opportunity to be more open. This is particularly true for sectors like healthcare, where Palantir’s software is used to process personal data. People have a right to understand how Palantir technology works, and how our customers use it.

Common misconceptions recur, particularly around the assumption that Palantir can use or transfer client data for its own purposes, or can join data from different clients together to sell on. Palantir is not a “data broker” or “data aggregator.” Palantir is a software company. Taking on the tech giants: the lawyer fighting the power of algorithmic systems | Social networking.