Palantir extends reach into British state as gets access to sensitive FCA data

chrisjj 184 points 59 comments March 22, 2026
www.theguardian.com · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (13 comments)

themafia

> Palantir has previously defended its work, saying it has led to about 99,000 extra operations being scheduled in the NHS No hard evidence of this was provided or is readily available. > helped UK police tackle domestic violence And precisely how was this done? > Palantir will have to destroy data after completion of the contract Contractual obligations that are not practically enforceable will not be honored. I don't think these individual administrative agencies have the acumen necessary to correctly negotiate these contracts.

Natfan

https://hansard.parliament.uk/search?searchTerm=palantir

drtgh

> [Palantir] The Miami-based company, co-founded by the billionaire Donald Trump donor Peter Thiel And backed by In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital (CIA, the Central Intelligence Agency of the US). https://fortune.com/2025/07/29/in-q-tel-cia-venture-capital-...

therobots927

Alex Karp will be held accountable eventually. I can’t think of anyone more evil than that rat fucker

Oarch

As a Brit, I've never had the sense the UK (specifically the City of London) has any genuine interest in tackling money laundering. I suspect our economy is structurally reliant upon us being extremely good at it.

OrangePilled

Previously: " US to embed Palantir AI across military " - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47471655 "The singularity".

xvxvx

Are we seeing the beginning of super-corporations that will supersede nation states?

overvale

Feelings about Palantir aside, this is a really misleading headline. The FCA has hired Palantir to "investigate the watchdog’s internal intelligence data", which presumably requires Palantir to have access to that sensitive data. Saying that Palantir is "reaching" into the British state, and then having the article image be "billionaire Donald Trump donor Peter Thiel" literally holding a wad of cash is... not exactly a high standard of reportage.

meffmadd

Genuine question to people more knowledgeable: Why are politicians/technocrats doing this? Also generally speaking e.g. in relation to chat control and so on. Do they think this is what the people actually want because of lobbying or are they aware and believe they know better? Is it literally just corruption? Or are there actual benefits and we are just in the HN bubble where most people think its a bad idea?

jandom

It’s likely an impossible choice, between inept big four consultancy groups (that charge $$$, deliver little, and run everything through manual excel entry) vs palantir who likely will deliver results. I have no love for Palantir but at least they’re competent. During covid, palantir had to elbow its way to sell to the UK govt and replaced dilapidated “solutions” from the big four.

WatchDog

> Palantir [...] gets access to sensitive FCA data. Is this the right characterization? Is Palantir being given access to the data(to do with what they like), or is Palantir software being deployed in the customer private cloud environment? I am under the impression that Palantir is typically deployed on-premise, or in a private cloud, where the customer can ensure that the data remains sovereign. Particularly in a military setting, it would be deployed in an airgapped or highly controlled network.

TrackerFF

I work in the maritime domain for the Norwegian gov., where we've had a couple of demos. AFAIK, there's only one agency here that uses Palantir software - the customs service - and that's not any secret info. But we frequently work with people from adjacent fields (military, law enforcement, aviation, other maritime, etc.), basically the usual suspects as far as Palantir clients go. My observation has been that there's no strong push or even desire to become a customer. The people I've talked with have either been outright unimpressed, or have already similar systems they've rolled out themselves. From the demos we've had, it seemed to me that Palantir can do well in countries where all the potential clients are isolated from each others (disorganized even), and do not have and good means of sharing data / communicating with each others. There's a lot of hype, myth even, around what their tools do - and I can understand why many are just saying "no thanks" when they come knocking. It is sort of underwhelming.

jauntywundrkind

As if being Palantir isn't bad enough, the UK arm is headed by Louis Mosley. Who likes to go on tv wearing black, like is grandad Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists. https://www.thenational.scot/news/25759699.palantir-uk-boss-... It's beyond alarming seeing this company be allowed in the door.

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