The appeal of Palantir to the Civil Service is clear; it offers workable (and working) IT 'solutions' in an environment where too often IT projects have failed to deliver, but the problems with Palantir are two fold:
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The appeal of Palantir to the Civil Service is clear; it offers workable (and working) IT 'solutions' in an environment where too often IT projects have failed to deliver, but the problems with Palantir are two fold:
Its links to the Far Right (Peter Thiel is clearly an anti-democrat), leading to concerns about the firm being in control of so much UK vital data;
But if it wasn't Palantir, putting the state into hock with a large single provider is in itself ill-advised.
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The appeal of Palantir to the Civil Service is clear; it offers workable (and working) IT 'solutions' in an environment where too often IT projects have failed to deliver, but the problems with Palantir are two fold:
Its links to the Far Right (Peter Thiel is clearly an anti-democrat), leading to concerns about the firm being in control of so much UK vital data;
But if it wasn't Palantir, putting the state into hock with a large single provider is in itself ill-advised.
@ChrisMayLA6
With no open tendering process either. Thiel's agenda doesn't care much for people, which is somewhat at odds with the fundamental ethos of the NHS. -
The appeal of Palantir to the Civil Service is clear; it offers workable (and working) IT 'solutions' in an environment where too often IT projects have failed to deliver, but the problems with Palantir are two fold:
Its links to the Far Right (Peter Thiel is clearly an anti-democrat), leading to concerns about the firm being in control of so much UK vital data;
But if it wasn't Palantir, putting the state into hock with a large single provider is in itself ill-advised.
@ChrisMayLA6 #palantir is an ideological Trojan horse.
Thiel is against democracy, according to himself.
His spiel is that tech-control should replace democracy.
He, Musk, J.D. Vance and the TESCREAL crowd see #ai as the second coming.
It implies the colonization of the mind.
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The appeal of Palantir to the Civil Service is clear; it offers workable (and working) IT 'solutions' in an environment where too often IT projects have failed to deliver, but the problems with Palantir are two fold:
Its links to the Far Right (Peter Thiel is clearly an anti-democrat), leading to concerns about the firm being in control of so much UK vital data;
But if it wasn't Palantir, putting the state into hock with a large single provider is in itself ill-advised.
Consolidation of power into a single company what could go wrong?
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@ChrisMayLA6 #palantir is an ideological Trojan horse.
Thiel is against democracy, according to himself.
His spiel is that tech-control should replace democracy.
He, Musk, J.D. Vance and the TESCREAL crowd see #ai as the second coming.
It implies the colonization of the mind.
They are more aptly described as an extinction cult. The world they want is one inhabited by digital beings they are the masters of. If businesses have AI and robots, what need is there of people?
They are now clothing themselves in end days religious imagery, but everything about them is at a minimum a display of sheer disregard for people. They fund science denial because public health has a bad habit of finding their deadly business practice
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