79 pointsby jay_kyburz5 hours ago5 comments
  • dmos629 minutes ago
    Ran into someone working at Palantir that was above the average foot soldier. They bragged about not having a moral compass. I think that some people enjoy being part of something influential, even if the influence is destructive. "Look at how much money I'm making, how respectable I look, and what interesting social and technical engineering challenges I tackle".

    Btw, has anyone heard of Palantir internally cosplaying a paramilitary org? Ranks and designations and such on their equivalent of Discord. I don't remember the details now, but when I saw that it left the impression that these people are detached from reality. I wonder how pervasive this practice is.

  • gnabgib5 hours ago
    Related: Pulitzer Prize Winners 2026 (80 points, 27 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48015097
  • pythonic_hellan hour ago
    Well deserved for the winners.
  • jazzpush2an hour ago
    Quick, someone bury the "Do Palantir workers think they're the bad guys?" thread!
  • jay_kyburz5 hours ago
    "Dake Kang, Garance Burke, Byron Tau, Aniruddha Ghosal and Yael Grauer, contributor, of Associated Press

    For an astonishing global investigation into state-of-the-art tools of mass surveillance, created in Silicon Valley, advanced in China and spreading worldwide before returning to America for secret new uses by the U.S. Border Patrol."