Inside Palantir
Palantir is one of the most powerful and most mysterious companies in the world. The American tech giant, co-founded by MAGA supporter Peter Thiel, provides essential and controversial technology to (Western) militaries and police forces. The Dutch government is also a client. How desirable is that?
Palantir, named after the magical seeing stones from Lord of the Rings, develops software that can link, analyze, and visualize enormous amounts of data. The company supplies armies, intelligence agencies, and police services: from the Ukrainian military to help hold back the Russians to the U.S. immigration enforcement agency ICE to track down migrants.
The Netherlands has also been using Palantir technology for years, largely outside public view, according to research by Follow the Money. The Dutch military has worked with it since 2010; the National Police uses the software as the core of its data platform for combating serious crime. Large volumes of police data – from incident reports to telecom and location data – are made searchable and analyzable through a single system. Palantir itself states that it only provides a platform and does not process the data.
This use raises fundamental questions. How transparent are these systems? Who oversees the algorithms? What safeguards exist against errors, bias, or wrongful suspicion? And what does it mean for our digital sovereignty?
Over TechdenkersTechnologie is een onlosmakelijk onderdeel geworden van ons leven, maar staan we daar wel genoeg bij stil? Tijdens Techdenkers leggen we technische innovatie langs de ethische meetlat. Welke invloed heeft de komst van AI op onze levens? Hoe gaan we met behulp van tech de klimaatcrisis oplossen? En willen we dat algoritmes onze partnerkeuze bepalen?
De serie Techdenkers wordt inhoudelijk verzorgd en uitgezonden door De Balie en is onderdeel van onze partnership met Adyen.