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Firefox browser has started shipping Brave's adblock-rust engine

https://shivankaul.com/blog/firefox-bundles-adblock-rust
1•shscs911•12s ago•0 comments

LazySlide: Accessible and interoperable whole-slide image analysis

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41592-026-03044-7
1•PaulHoule•12s ago•0 comments

Can non-developer build commercial products with AI

1•rkorlimarla•2m ago•0 comments

What Will It Take to Get A.I. Out of Schools?

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/progress-report/what-will-it-take-to-get-ai-out-of-schools
1•mitchbob•2m ago•1 comments

Girl, 10, finds rare Mexican axolotl under Welsh bridge

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9d4zgnqpqeo
1•codezero•3m ago•0 comments

The no-go zone paradox: Chornobyl's wildlife thrives amid pro-nuclear shift

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/apr/23/exclusion-zone-chornobyl-wildlife-thrives-ami...
4•jethronethro•3m ago•0 comments

ChatGPT ads expand to logged-out users

https://searchengineland.com/chatgpt-ads-expand-to-logged-out-users-475377
1•speckx•3m ago•0 comments

Vision Banana Image Generators Are Generalist Vision Learners

https://vision-banana.github.io/
1•aanet•4m ago•1 comments

France probes suspected weather sensor tampering after Polymarket bets

https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/23/europe/france-weather-sensor-polymarket-bet-intl-latam
1•shscs911•5m ago•0 comments

DietPi released a new version v10.3

1•StephanStS•6m ago•0 comments

MurphySig: A 90-day field report on signing AI-collaborative code

https://murphysig.dev/launch/
1•round-tower-kev•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Thedex releases distilled/finetuned model

https://thedex.run/blog/tinythedex-smaller-faster-cheaper
1•rkorlimarla•7m ago•0 comments

Some Interrail travellers told to cancel passports as hacked data posted online

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/apr/23/some-interrail-travellers-told-to-cancel-passp...
1•nhatcher•7m ago•0 comments

Slovenia to air films about Palestine instead of Eurovision song contest

https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2026/apr/23/slovenia-to-air-films-about-palestine-instea...
1•hebelehubele•8m ago•0 comments

Curated list of projects and tools built with libghostty

https://github.com/Uzaaft/awesome-libghostty
2•rob•14m ago•0 comments

Amazon "Prime Air" will be available to customers in as soon as 4-5 years (2013)

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/amazon-unveils-futuristic-plan-delivery-by-drone/
3•sssilver•16m ago•0 comments

I built a fitness app in 7 days with no eng background, using Claude as CTO

https://pacenotes.run
1•majnoni•16m ago•0 comments

Meta to cut 10% of jobs, or 8k employees

https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/23/meta-job-cuts-10-percent-8000-employees/
21•Vaslo•17m ago•0 comments

DEA Final Order Rescheduling Marijuana to Schedule III

https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1437441/dl
1•hua•17m ago•0 comments

Google exec says almost every big studio uses AI, but not all disclose it

https://www.videogameschronicle.com/news/their-favourite-games-were-already-built-with-ai-google-...
1•speckx•19m ago•0 comments

Voxyflow – an AI companion that plans, codes, and ships with you

https://voxyflow.snaf.foo
1•jcviau•20m ago•0 comments

AI Agents Demystified: A multi-step agent in 50 lines of Python

https://marvin.damschen.net/post/llm-based-agents/
1•intemd•20m ago•0 comments

What Happened to Solving Cancer?

2•ok1984•23m ago•0 comments

OpenAI's better approach to CyberSecurity compared to Anthropic

https://xbow.com/blog/democratizing-cyber-capabilities
1•throwaway911282•24m ago•0 comments

Message Queue vs. Task Queue vs. Message Broker: why are these always mixed up?

https://medium.com/@yashvaishnav1404/message-queue-and-task-queue-when-to-use-them-fe3a694f6433
1•birdculture•25m ago•0 comments

Whitehouse memo on Adversarial Distillation [pdf]

https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/NSTM-4.pdf
1•vibe42•26m ago•0 comments

What, Exactly, Is a Fair Wage?

https://prospect.org/2026/04/17/fair-wage-standard-arindrajit-dube-book-review/
1•robtherobber•29m ago•0 comments

A fly has been uploaded

https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2026/03/a-fly-has-been-uploaded.html
4•bookofjoe•30m ago•1 comments

Pynotify-auto – Zero-code notifications for long-running Python scripts

https://github.com/shahbhuwan/pynotify-auto
1•shahb•30m ago•0 comments

IOU Wallet – The Integrity Protocol

https://iou-wallet.com/
1•xklondon•32m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Palantir employees are starting to wonder if they're the bad guys

https://www.wired.com/story/palantir-employees-are-starting-to-wonder-if-theyre-the-bad-guys/
165•pavel_lishin•1h ago

Comments

gigatexal•1h ago
now? what took them so long??
TaylorSwift•1h ago
stock price hit an ath and have been falling since
bell-cot•1h ago
Every True Capitalist knows to use the golden rule as their moral compass.
zawaideh•1h ago
No need to wonder
jeffwask•1h ago
A real "Are we the baddies?" moment for them
sorokod•10m ago
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ToKcmnrE5oY

...now it complete

eloisant•9m ago
Sounds really late, honestly. It's been apparent from people outside the company for years, and employees realize it just now?
QuercusMax•1h ago
For a company supposedly full of smart people they sure do work hard to turn their brains off
jameskilton•1h ago
Never underestimate the lengths and depths people will go in the name of a salary.
QuercusMax•1h ago
“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” ― Upton Sinclair
Jtsummers•1h ago
I've been working in the aerospace (now space) arena my entire career, and there's a lot of overlap there with the defense industry. What I've seen is that it's very easy for people to look at their work as a narrow area and to forget about the consequences of it (how it's used, what it actually does when used). I think many (I won't say the majority but it wouldn't surprise me) in the defense and intelligence sector don't think, either willfully or because of lack of introspection in general, about these things.
palmotea•1h ago
> What I've seen is that it's very easy for people to look at their work as a narrow area and to forget about the consequences of it (how it's used, what it actually does when used).

Or it's a lot more complicated and doesn't lend itself to blank-and-white answers. Say you're working on nuclear weapons technology: is your job building weapons to enable the genocidal destruction of another country, or to prevent that kind of thing through a credible MAD deterrent? Both things are simultaneously true.

And then there's no way to predict the future: what's true today when you build it may not be true tomorrow when it's used, because there's a different leader or political system in place.

Jtsummers•56m ago
> Or it's a lot more complicated and doesn't lend itself to blank-and-white answers.

Did I say it wasn't complicated? I'll admit I didn't say it was complicated, but you can't infer a sentiment from a non-existent statement in either direction.

Yes, it's complicated. But I stand by my statement that many people just don't think about it. They want to solve interesting problems or to get paid well, or both, and so they take jobs at places like Palantir without thinking through the consequences.

Many others do think it through and either find a way to justify it, or do work they don't like and live with the emotional consequences of it.

palmotea•49m ago
> Yes, it's complicated. But I stand by my statement that many people just don't think about it...so they take jobs at places like Palantir without thinking through the consequences.

> Many others do think it through and either find a way to justify it

Do they not think about it, or just not talk about it to you? I could totally see someone thinking about it in private, accepting some justification or reason, and then moving on to their work and not discussing it.

Jtsummers•40m ago
I'm the sort who asks. Many who answered just didn't think it through, they didn't think about what the thing they were working on actually did within the larger system. I won't generalize this to the whole population (why I won't claim it's the majority of all people in the field) but the majority I did discuss this with had, at best, a hand-wavey "national defense" justification but did not think about what the thing they worked on did. Its effectiveness for its job, or its ultimate purpose.

Though a lot actually just wouldn't even discuss it in the first place. I think, though, that if you're going to work on a weapon or a component for a weapon you owe it to yourself to think deeply about the topic. I've known too many people who thought about it too late and realized that they couldn't live with it. Better to figure that out at the start and change career paths than at the end and either kill yourself or drink yourself to death.

mbesto•8m ago
> I think many (I won't say the majority but it wouldn't surprise me) in the defense and intelligence sector don't think, either willfully or because of lack of introspection in general, about these things.

I think it has more to do with the fact that many of the products built for defense are never actually used against adversaries in their useful life. Just look at our nuclear weapon stockpile.

Palantir on the other hand is an invisible weapon. They could be reading my comment right now and identifying me with sentiment "adversarial" for all I know. What implications that has on my daily life is innumerable...and I'm a US citizen!

renticulous•12m ago
Very well said. I will provide an analogy.

Imagine I came to know that ghosts exist with supernatural powers. My first reaction shouldn't be of fear. It should be of curiosity. What laws are prevailing in ghost realm which provides them with great powers over material world. Does one becoming a ghost suddenly know the truth of Rieman Hypothesis or P=NP?

The same could be asked of people who are supposed to know better by virtue of them close to knowledge and technology. Should they spend their improving lives of others or enslaving them for material gains?

leonidasrup•1h ago
Palantir employees should understand that they are not regular employees at a regular company. They are U.S. defense contractors at an U.S. defense company.

Also Palantir customers should understand that by buying Palantir services/products they are doing business with U.S. defense company.

I don't say that this is positive or negative, it just clarifies the relationships and it should set the expectations.

ch4s3•1h ago
Yeah, for sure. Defense contracting is as good or bad as the policies of the government which is going to change over time. All else being equal, if we want to live in a safe and successful society we want good/talented people working in defense. The trick is holding the government accountable for its policies and profligate defense spending.
discreteevent•1h ago
> Defense contracting is as good or bad as the policies of the government which is going to change over time.

This is true sometimes. But many times the companies and the government get together to kill people for money (The dead people's money or the taxpayers money - they don't mind which, money is money)

jmward01•41m ago
I don't agree with this. Just because the DOD says it is ethical doesn't mean it is so contractors have a duty to maintain ethical standards in the face of changing DOD standards. To me this means a DOD contractor decides before they go in that they will have limits and sticks to them. I think anyone working for Palantir right now should be considering the limits they have and if the company is going beyond them or not. I know that I for one do not consider their work ethical and would not work for them even though the DOD says it is ok. Understand before you sign.
throwaw12•21m ago
Defense is good

Offense, killing is not good.

Current department understands that and hence renamed to department of war

colechristensen•1h ago
I have had an active hand in designing weapons at a defense contractor (I was at one time an expert in external ballistics simulation) and I'd feel uncomfortable with the morality of working at Palantir.
Rooster61•1h ago
How do you reconcile having worked in this capacity mentally? Not being snarky or judgemental, genuinely curious as to the mindset of someone who has been in this position.
dmitrygr•1h ago
"If we do not design better weapons, those countries who do will subjugate us. I'd rather that not happen."
colechristensen•1h ago
Pragmatism. We live in the real world, one where threat of violence and actual violence is indeed sometimes necessary. Wouldn't it be nice if everyone was peaceful and we could all get along happy and free? Sure, but that's not the world we live in and sticking my head in the sand and leaving the necessary dirty work to other people would bring me no more peace than helping do the necessary things as well as possible.

The most weaponlike thing I worked on was a sniper rifle program, and to me precision weapons are one of those best you can do in an imperfect world kinds of things.

elzbardico•44m ago
There's usually a bit more accountability in using a missile that using palantir systems. At least legally, a missile could only be used in defense or in a war authorized by the congress.

Until recently, most of the population believed that the vast majority of America's military actions were somewhat just and legal, for noble reasons.

Dark stuff like Palantir was never like that.

palmotea•37m ago
> How do you reconcile having worked in this capacity mentally? Not being snarky or judgemental, genuinely curious as to the mindset of someone who has been in this position.

I don't work at defense contractor, but it would probably help to imagine the situation Ukraine is in. If no one in the West was comfortable working in this capacity, it would all be Russian territory now (and more besides).

convolvatron•36m ago
I have been in the same position. Maybe I was naive but I believed that weapons design wasn't the most moral thing in the world, but sadly necessary, and I actually trusted the military to .. I guess act in legitimate and legal ways. That if those weapons were used in a conflict, it would be defensive and defendable morally.

Of course that was before the inexplicable adventurism in the Middle East.

queenkjuul•1h ago
Don't they work for the same government you did?
colechristensen•55m ago
I'm not exactly sure what you're getting at? (of course the literal answer is yes but that's obvious)
garyfirestorm•42m ago
Under the name of the* same government. You can’t equate 1940s US govt with today’s government. Different people different priorities different actions. Not necessarily saying good or bad one way or the other. But ‘same’ is reductionist way of interpreting the situation. There’s plenty of nuance.
Hikikomori•1h ago
I believe they're called war companies now.
Rooster61•1h ago
Until the next administration, at least
bastawhiz•30m ago
> They are U.S. defense contractors at an U.S. defense company.

We should stop using the word "defense". They're war contractors at a war company.

The Department of Defense is the Department of War. They changed the name and then immediately started taking military action against other countries. We're in a war in Iran for reasons that nobody can quite articulate, but it certainly has nothing to do with "defending" the country.

TheCoelacanth•23m ago
Regardless of what the Trump administration will tell you, that's not it's name. The executive branch is not empowered to unilaterally change the name of a department.
Ritewut•20m ago
Regardless of what the name legally is, they are in fact initiating war against other nations and Palantir is one of the main players in those wars.
Panda4•18m ago
Even by ignoring the name change, that is its function. Even if it was called department of defense, it's actually department of war.
Peritract•17m ago
If it's what they call themselves and what they're currently doing, how much does it matter what the official name is?
gib444•21m ago
War and defence are the same thing in the US, so the naming doesn't really matter. To go after enemies, real or otherwise, with overwhelming force (to also the scare the ones not bombed this time), is to "defend" the US. That is how they justify it to themselves.
throw0101d•16m ago
On the changes to US military organization and thinking post-WW2 (and the name change):

> […] The United States has a Department of Defense for a reason. It was called the “War” Department until 1947, when the dictates of a new and more dangerous world required the creation of a much larger military organization than any in American history. Harry Truman and the American leaders who destroyed the Axis, and who now were facing the Soviet empire, realized that national security had become a larger undertaking than the previous American tradition of moving, as needed, between discrete conditions of “war” and “peace.”

> These leaders understood that America could no longer afford the isolationist luxury of militarizing itself during times of threat and then making soldiers train with wooden sticks when the storm clouds passed. Now, they knew, the security of the country would be a daily undertaking, a matter of ongoing national defense, in which the actual exercise of military force would be only part of preserving the freedom and independence of the United States and its allies.

* https://archive.is/https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive...

The author is a retired professor from the US Naval War College:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Nichols_(academic)

rob74•15m ago
It certainly has nothing to do with defending the country the department is located in.
echelon•3m ago
> We're in a war in Iran for reasons that nobody can quite articulate

(1) Nuclear proliferation.

Granted, we once had a deal that looked as though it was holding. Trump's nixing of the deal and the happenings in Ukraine accelerated Iran's desire to have nukes.

(2) Also, as I've been reading, this might be a second order play to stall China's invasion of Taiwan. If China has to dip into strategic oil reserves to smooth out impact to its economy, it may forgo its Taiwan invasion plans for a bit longer.

stackedinserter•2m ago
> for reasons that nobody can quite articulate

They were articulated many times, maybe you didn't want to hear.

The action itself was poorly planned and executed, it's a different question.

throwaw12•23m ago
In isolation your clarification is right, but considering that US department of War actually kills hundreds of thousands of people, there should be no question about negativity of that department
jimbo808•7m ago
It's a U.S. domestic surveillance operation, disguised as a defense contractor.

Or really, it's not disguised at all. The company is named after Tolkein's palantíri, so they weren't being shy about it.

It's a company that exists solely to exploit a loophole that shouldn't have been upheld, effectively eliminating the fourth amendment.

nohell•1h ago
https://archive.ph/9UjjI
sjsdaiuasgdia•1h ago
Alex Karp is a fascist. The whole company should be ended.
ZunarJ5•1h ago
That manifesto was antihuman.
therobots927•30m ago
I’m sure a copious amount of ketamine was involved in its production.
uoaei•14m ago
It read like a longtime adderall addict who switched to clean meth a while ago.
ai-x•1h ago
Classic, "Find 5 people in a 1000+ organization" and prepare hit piece yellow-journalism that is too profitable in the anti-tech sentiment era (which they help create due to their resentment of Tech taking over their importance and cash flow)
devindotcom•1h ago
literally none of this is true
queenkjuul•1h ago
Anti-tech sentiment is completely the tech industry's fault. Nobody likes tech because tech sucks to use. End of.
ed_balls•1h ago
Palantir delenda est
lamasery•27m ago
A lot of things delenda est. The ever-growing length of the delenda-est list and the nonexistent rate at which we're est'ing all those delendas is quite worrisome at this point.
jimmar•1h ago
Seems analogous to employees of a missile manufacturer being upset that their missiles were used for their intended purpose.
ethagnawl•1h ago
I look forward to all of these comments being Hoovered into their autonomous surveillance machine in short order.

Also, yes, they are.

therobots927•40m ago
The anti Palantir / anti AI / anti tech / anti billionaire sentiment is just way too strong. Far, far to many people post inflammatory things for the data collection to really matter.

Contrary to Karp’s fantasies, he will not have the capability to send fent-laced piss drones to every single person who’s ever criticized him.

In addition, the more data they have on us, the higher the odds they have something “bad”. So the irony of them increasing the volume of surveillance data is that it becomes pointless for people to “behave” in front of the camera once they’ve “crossed the line”.

palmotea•1h ago
> ...about working for a company named after J. R. R. Tolkien’s corrupting all-seeing orb.

Wasn't the the problem that Sauron had one so he could corrupt the other users through the orb, but the orb itself was not corrupting?

sfink•49m ago
It was, which is why it makes such a perfect analogy.

Surveillance has lots of good and bad uses, and is morally neutral itself. Powerful but neutral. The problem comes when the users use it for bad purposes, and in fact it is so tempting that they can't help using it for more and more bad purposes. If every palantir (either one) user was a "good guy" who refused to use it for bad purposes, it would be a potent force for good, and that's why they were created in the first place.

OkayPhysicist•34m ago
I thoroughly disagree. Surveillance is an invasive tool of control, and as such intrinsically immoral. Just like a slew of other immoral actions, it may be a net positive when applied for a greater good, but if not used for anything, it's evil.

This is trivially true to most common moral understandings. If my neighbor installs a camera pointing through my window and into my shower, applying some fancy technique to see through clouded glass, most of us would justly think that was immoral of him, even in complete absence of any other immoral actions facilitated by that surveillance.

sfink•15m ago
That depends on the definition of "surveillance". Should a foreman not pay close attention to his workers? Should a hospital not track its patients' locations and vital stats while within the hospital? Are cameras in a jewelry shop morally wrong?

Your neighbor's surveillance of you is bad because they're violating your privacy, and using the tool of surveillance to do it. If you lived in a foggy area and they were monitoring their front walkway with a camera that was good at seeing through fog, and they happened to get a corner of your property in the camera's field of view, then you might have something to complain about but I wouldn't call it morally wrong.

I agree that surveillance is a tool of control. So are fences. It's ok to control some things.

I also agree that surveillance gets into sticky territory very, very quickly. I definitely don't have a clean dividing line between what I'd like the police to be able to see and what they shouldn't. (Especially when the temptation to share that data is so strong and frequently succumbed to.) I would probably say in some useless abstract sense, mass surveillance is also morally neutral. But given that it's proven to be pretty much impossible to implement in a way that doesn't end up serving more evil than good, I wouldn't object to calling it immoral.

OkayPhysicist•2m ago
Again, there are plenty of instances where enough good comes from surveillance that it outweighs the intrinsic negative, but denying that it is, in of itself, intrinsically negative suggests that some creepy dude monitoring everyone's every move is just fine, as long as he's not doing anything else.

A more obvious parallel is violence. To trip over Godwin's law, shooting Hitler would have been a moral action, but not because "shooting people" is amoral. Shooting a random person is definitely immoral. We constantly do immoral things for the greater good, but it is a mistake to thusly assume those actions are amoral.

kortilla•28m ago
It’s not morally neutral, the very existence of surveillance has a chilling effect on dissenting opinions.
renticulous•21m ago
If Palintir itself gets hacked, all the data and analysis will be stopped up by others.
uoaei•18m ago
There are morally neutral technologies, but the unique quality of surveillance data containing PII (and tools to correlate across time and space) means that it's only morally neutral until it is used in any capacity. Which is to say, it is not morally neutral.
sfink•7m ago
You've already made a pretty big leap from surveillance to storing surveillance data persistently, and another to the tools. I'm not going to argue that mass surveillance is morally neutral.[1]

Tolkien's Palantirs let you see and communicate and influence across vast distances. That's no more immoral than a videophone. Of course, that's also not surveillance; that'd be a telescope. But surely telescopes aren't immoral?

[1] I mean, I would, but (1) you can't create a mass surveillance system from a morally neutral or positive place, and (2) it seems nearly impossible to implement a mass surveillance system without creating more harm than benefit. So it becomes a boring semantics argument as to whether mass surveillance is fundamentally immoral or not.

edaemon•33m ago
Sauron is the reason the palantiri are dangerous, yes, because his influence causes them to mislead and delude the viewer. That happens even when Sauron is not directly influencing the visions. Essentially, when the forces of evil are present, the seeing stones may show the truth but in such a profoundly misleading way that even those with the best intentions will misinterpret their visions and fall prey to misunderstanding. This even happens to Sauron himself.

It's worth noting that by the War of the Ring (the Lord of the Rings story) Sauron had possessed a palantir for around 1000 years. Anyone who knew what a palantir was should have known that they were not to be trusted.

As for how that relates to Palantir the real-life corporation, I'll leave that up to your interpretation.

morgoths_bane•33m ago
That was also my interpretation from reading LotR as well.
chromacity•1h ago
I think this is a weird side effect of how we portray evil corporations in fiction and in journalism. We imagine that everyone working there is a moustache-twirling villain. And then we get a job at Meta or Flock or Palantir, look around, and don't see any moustache-twirling villains. There's no one saying "ha ha, we should hurt people just for fun". So, it must be that we're the good guys.

Even if some of the outcomes seem reprehensible, it's not really evil because we're good people. We do it in a responsible and caring way. We're truly sorry that your grandma is now hooked up on endless AI-generated slop, but shouldn't the media be talking about all the other grandmas whose lives are enriched by our AI? We have strict safety rules for the types of cryptocurrency ads that can target the elderly, too.

FireBeyond•42m ago
> There's no one saying "ha ha, we should hurt people just for fun". So, it must be that we're the good guys.

It can get pretty close at times. Witness Meta and Zuck being told, in clear terms, that there was clear material threats to Burmese dissidents with some of the asks of Facebook. "The features matter more."

giraffe_lady•34m ago
Or like, anything peter thiel says ever.
elzbardico•39m ago
Let's me tell you. I worked at a IRS equivalent service in another country, and a lot of what I did was not very different from spying in our own citizens.

And you know what? there's a pervasive ideology in the place that justifies it all.

One day you wake up, and you realize that you see the tax payer as a cunning and evil adversary that needs to be reigned upon, and you see that all the jokes, the water cooler talk, the general ethos is toward this vision of the tax payer, even if the official documents say otherwise.

And we are talking about Tax Payers here. Now imagine an organization like Palantir that can de-humanize their targets marking them with the Terrorist label. It is easy to convince people that they are on the right side.

uoaei•16m ago
> you see the tax payer as a cunning and evil adversary that needs to be reigned upon, and you see that all the jokes, the water cooler talk, the general ethos is toward this vision of the tax payer

Any force employing threat of violence for control does the same. Police presence, military occupation, hell you even see it in the eyes of loss prevention folks.

shevy-java•57m ago
Starting to wonder?

Everyone know what Palantir was. The name is a dead-give-away.

I think it is really time that the superrich are downsized. Certain companies that are working against the people also need to be removed. Key considerations in any democracy need to be consistent. Palantir (and others) create inconsistencies. Granted, none of this will be fixed while the orange king is having his daily rage-fits, but sooner or later this is an inter-generational problem, no matter which puppet is taking over.

dessimus•14m ago
Probably thought "Total Surveillance" was too on-the-nose when starting up.
waffletower•57m ago
The company also chose to name itself after a fantasy scrying device corrupted by evil. There might be an ounce of self-fulfilling prophecy here.
swader999•51m ago
Thought it was an onion article at first glance.
rconti•50m ago
Weird. I worked near a Palantir office in 2017 and I remember thinking it would be "morally challenging" to work there. 9 years later, it's just becoming apparent?
KaiserPro•48m ago
A recruiter tried to get me to interview there in 2018. I asked them about their reputation and they went cold after that.
Maxatar•31m ago
Most high paying companies would do the same, irrespective of their reputation.
babymetal•33m ago
I was contacted by Palantir recruiters about 15 years ago. I found the name troubling along with the gov't contracts, as well as learning that spending one night a week at the office was encouraged.
MengerSponge•21m ago
It's not like these guys have any media literacy or emotional intelligence to speak of. If they did, they wouldn't have gone to work for Thiel and Karp's perfectly named company.

I'm pretty sure this is the same population of people who lost (and may still be losing sleep) over Roko's Basilisk. They're clever but not smart.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal%27s_wager

mdni007•47m ago
Is it really surprising that the same <people we are not allowed to talk about> currently commiting REDACTED, are also the one who are in charge of the most diabolical company in the modern era. Just listen to what the CEO has to say about the people of REDACTED. This isn't even some crazy anti-REDACTED conspiracy anymore.
therobots927•37m ago
I know exactly what you’re trying to say and you need to understand that it’s highly counterproductive.

The United States was built on genocide of the natives, slavery of captives from Africa, and multiple unecessary wars that have killed millions of innocent people. This is not a new thing.

vlowther•14m ago
It also isn't a unique thing. See (for example) the entire history of, well, pretty much any country. There is a reason Utopia literally means "no place".

* Genocide of the natives? Literally all countries in the Americas, for starters. * Slavery of captives from Africa? Pretty much everyone with colonies in and around the Caribbean was guilty of that too. * Multiple unnecessary wars that have killed millions of people? That encompasses more or less all of European history.

By all means, criticize Palantir. But don't pretend US history has anything in particular that would set up the prerequisites for it to exist.

hd4•46m ago
It was always really obvious but that recent full-throated-fascist manifesto has left no doubt. One thing Palantir have going for them is this deranged movie-villain-style transparency about their intentions, they don't even care about hiding it.
Insanity•41m ago
'no shit sherlock' comes to mind.
jmyeet•39m ago
When your product is used by a military occupation to target and kill civilians and their families [1][2], it's kind of shocking that there's any doubt. But as Upton Sinclair said:

> “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”

I would go further and argue that Palantir employees are just as valid military targets as occupation soldiers are.

[1]: https://www.business-humanrights.org/es/%C3%BAltimas-noticia...

[2]: https://www.972mag.com/lavender-ai-israeli-army-gaza/

BugsJustFindMe•26m ago
Only "starting" to wonder does not speak well of Palantir employees.
Ritewut•24m ago
Everyone in this industry should be required to read Careless People by Sara Wynn-Williams about her tenure at Facebook. Not because the book is about how evil Meta/Facebook is as a company but because you get to see the lengths people go to mentally convince themselves they are the good guy. Repeatedly in the book she tries to assure herself she's making the world better and that there's actually an ethical, positive company inside Facebook and she just had to navigate the politics to make it known despite all evidence to the contrary.
ien24sdq•17m ago
This is a really important thing that people on the left in particular seem to consistently overlook: local incentives, emergent corporate behaviors, and the unconscious need to believe you’re “right” have way more explanatory power than “X is actually evil”.
alex1138•11m ago
Yeah but keep in mind what Zuck specifically has done. He copied Snapchat multiple times, Facebook overwrote people's public-facing emails, "dumb fucks" in IMs
Ritewut•9m ago
Zuckerberg is awful person but he alone is not "Meta." It is a company made up of thousands of employees and each of those people play their role in enshittifying the internet. Some of do it gleefully and others do it because they think the battle is better fought in the company than out of it. The large salary also doesn't hurt.
orochimaaru•11m ago
There is no “ethical” company. They will tend towards making money by means that can be interpreted as being legal. Sometimes they will do things not legal - but those are calculated decisions based on how much the profit from said actions is compared to how much they will pay out as fines.

Ethics and laws are for chumps like us. Because we don’t have the financial and legal muscle to challenge the state.

ajkjk•5m ago
this take is irritating because it implies that people at companies don't have to bother being ethical or holding the people around them accountable at a personal level for being ethical, as if it's somehow predetermined by the environment, being at a corporation, how you behave.

Certainly it's true that the incentives of corporations push you to ignore ethics. But that's why they're ethics: they're precisely the things you should do that you don't have to do. That's what morality is. Sure, for the purposes of doing things about unethical companies, it might be best to view all corporations as fundamentally unethical because that implies that the right place to make society better is by opposing their behavior with laws. But at an everyday human level everyone is responsible for exactly the things that they do and being at a corporation in no way changes it at all.

jimbo808•4m ago
As far as businesses go, I'd say Palantir finds itself somewhere between "extremely ethically dubious" and "overtly, transparently evil."
badgersnake•2m ago
Why not?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B_Corporation_(certification)

sleepybrett•1m ago
sure.. but there is 'not ethical' and there is palantir...
tdb7893•6m ago
My experience is that people will be able to justify anything that is "normal". I went vegan after learning too much of how the literal sausage is made and the amount of people who have unprompted (people are weird about it so I try to avoid talking about being vegan) said something along the lines of "factory farming is awful but I just love bacon" and laugh is legitimately terrifying. It seems like if it's normal enough people will say something is bad and will happily do it anyway.

It's made me rethink my life a lot and was the impetus for me leaving tech.

Ritewut•2m ago
They are letting perfect be the enemy of good. If they respond with "I love bacon" then tell them to eat plant-based + bacon. It's still a vast improvement environmentally than what they were doing previously.
jmyeet•6m ago
To quote Upton Sinclair:

> “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”

But there's something bigger that you allude to, which is that very few peoplel think of themselves as the bad guys. People separate themselves from the harm they contribute to or they dehumanize the targets of that harm and then argue they deserve it somehow or simply that this is necessary for some reason (eg lesser evil arguments).

I eschew the concept of "bad guys" in general because it's a non-argument. Philosophically and politically it's known as "idealism" [1][2]. It's saying "we are the good guys because we are the good guys" and everyone think they're the good guys.

The alternative to this is materialism [3] and historical materialism [4]. There is no metaphysical or inherent goodness (or badness). You are the sum of your actions and their impact on the world. Likewise you are a product of your material world.

So we don't really need to go down the rabbit hole of figuring out if, say, FB/Meta or Palantir is a "good" company or if the employees are or feel "good". We can simply look at the impact and whether that impact was intentional or otherwise foreseeable.

And that record for Meta really isn't good eg Myanmar and the Rohingya genocide [5] or FB's real world harm from spreading misinformation [6].

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idealism

[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idealism_in_international_rela...

[3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Materialism

[4]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_materialism

[5]: https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2022/09/myanmar-faceb...

[6]: https://theconversation.com/facebook-data-reveal-the-devasta...

rpdillon•5m ago
I'm in the middle of this book right now, and I agree. It's a fantastic read to get inside the psychology of the folks that are making huge decisions about how society works.
snarf21•1m ago
This just another example of Sinclair's Law.
PunchyHamster•1m ago
I think Mitchell and Webb sketch is enough. It's not some slow descent to badness in case of Palantir, it's obvious from the PR materials alone
uoaei•20m ago
I remember seeing postings for "Forward Deployed Engineers" and thinking that this naming convention targets folks who don't like to work out but still have a military fetish and want to feel important.

It's self-aggrandizing egos all the way down/up (to Alex Karp).

groos•20m ago
Yes. The answer is yes.
Ancalagon•19m ago
Honestly doesn't even look like they pay that well compared to other major tech companies.

Like why justify it if it economically isn't even that advantageous? Ya'll are laughable.

howmayiannoyyou•6m ago
Defending the United States of America is never the wrong move.

We're not perfect. We've done bad. But, you won't find another nation on earth or in history who has contributed as much to global progress, stability and well-being.

Palantir is valuable member of our defense community. The hate is a sign they are successful, and som eof that hate is bought and paid for by foreign actors - including likely here on HN.

myth_drannon•3m ago
Palantir must be working on something amazing if they are constantly assaulted by Iranian/Chinese bots,Left fascists,"but GenOcide in HAZA" and others. Curiously not Boieng, not drone companies, but Palantir.

Time to load up on Palantir stocks?

PunchyHamster•2m ago
To any Palantir employee here: Yes, you are the baddies. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToKcmnrE5oY
seydor•1m ago
Wired does sanewashing now?