Palantir
A software company specializing in big data analytics, cited as an example of a 'power law winner' that continued to generate massive value after its IPO.
entitydetail.created_at
7/26/2025, 6:41:53 AM
entitydetail.last_updated
8/16/2025, 2:37:28 AM
entitydetail.research_retrieved
7/26/2025, 6:43:21 AM
Summary
Palantir is a technology company, co-founded by Peter Thiel and others in 2003, and currently headquartered in Denver, Colorado. Named after the 'seeing-stones' from J. R. R. Tolkien's 'The Lord of the Rings,' Palantir develops sophisticated data analytics and AI-powered automation software, including platforms like Gotham and Foundry. The company serves a diverse clientele, ranging from the United States Intelligence Community and Department of Defense to commercial entities and public health initiatives, notably assisting with COVID-19 efforts and vaccine allocation via its Tiberius software. Palantir's Shyam Sankar articulated the company's philosophy that AI can empower workers with 'superpowers,' a concept exemplified by their American Tech Fellows program, which was discussed at the 'Winning the AI race' event focused on strengthening the United States' position in artificial intelligence and re-industrialization.
Referenced in 3 Documents
Research Data
Extracted Attributes
Type
Information technology company
Founded
2003
Founders
Peter Thiel, Nathan Gettings, Joe Lonsdale, Stephen Cohen, Alex Karp
Philosophy
AI gives workers 'superpowers'
Name Origin
Named after 'palantír' (indestructible crystal balls) from J. R. R. Tolkien's 'The Lord of the Rings'
Headquarters
Denver, Colorado, United States
Authorization
One of five offerings authorized for Mission Critical National Security Systems (IL5) by the U.S. Department of Defense
Core Business
Data analytics software, AI-powered automation, data mining
Products/Platforms
Palantir Gotham, Palantir Foundry, Palantir Apollo, Palantir AIP, Tiberius
Timeline
- Palantir Technologies is founded. (Source: web_search_results)
2003
- Began supplying platoons directly in Afghanistan, with its software helping to avoid ambushes. (Source: web_search_results)
2011
- Several countries used Palantir's technology to track and contain the COVID-19 contagion. (Source: web_search_results)
2020-04
- Relocated its headquarters to Denver, Colorado. (Source: web_search_results)
2020-08
- Shyam Sankar of Palantir argued that AI gives workers 'superpowers,' a philosophy embodied in their American Tech Fellows program, at the 'Winning the AI race' event in Washington D.C. (Source: summary, related_documents)
Date not specified
Wikipedia
View on WikipediaPalantír
A palantír ([paˈlanˌtiːr]; pl. palantíri) is one of several indestructible crystal balls from J. R. R. Tolkien's epic-fantasy novel The Lord of the Rings. The word comes from Quenya palan 'far', and tir 'watch over'. The palantírs were used for communication and to see events in other parts of Arda, or in the past. The palantírs were made by the Elves of Valinor in the First Age, as told in The Silmarillion. By the time of The Lord of the Rings at the end of the Third Age, a few palantírs remained in use. They are used in some climactic scenes by major characters: Sauron, Saruman, Denethor the Steward of Gondor, and two members of the Company of the Ring: Aragorn and Pippin. A major theme of palantír usage is that while the stones show real objects or events, those using the stones had to "possess great strength of will and of mind" to direct the stone's gaze to its full capability. The stones were an unreliable guide to action, since what was not shown could be more important than what was selectively presented. A risk lay in the fact that users with sufficient power could choose what to show and what to conceal to other stones: in The Lord of the Rings, a palantír has fallen into the Enemy's hands, making the usefulness of all other existing stones questionable. Commentators such as the Tolkien scholar Paul Kocher note the hand of providence in their usage, while Joseph Pearce compares Sauron's use of the stones to broadcast wartime propaganda. Tom Shippey suggests that the message is that "speculation", looking into any sort of magic mirror (Latin: speculum) or stone to see the future, rather than trusting in providence, leads to error.
Web Search Results
- Palantir Technologies - Wikipedia
[edit] Palantir is one of four large technology firms( to start working with the NHS on supporting COVID-19 efforts through the provision of software from Palantir Foundry( and by April 2020, several countries had used Palantir's technology to track and contain the contagion.( Palantir also developed Tiberius, a software for vaccine allocation used in the United States.( In August 2020, Palantir Technologies relocated its headquarters to Denver, Colorado. [...] Palantir Foundry is a software platform offered for use in commercial and civil government sectors. It was popularized for use in the health sector by its use within the National Covid Cohort Collaborative, a secure enclave of Electronic Health Records from across the United States that produced hundreds of scientific manuscripts and won the NIH/FASEB Dataworks Grand Prize. Foundry was also used by the Center NHS England in dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic in England to analyze the operation [...] The company has four main projects: Palantir Gotham, Palantir Foundry, Palantir Apollo, and Palantir AIP. Palantir Gotham is an intelligence and defense tool used by militaries and counter-terrorism analysts. Its customers have included the United States Intelligence Community (USIC) and United States Department of Defense.( Their software as a service (SaaS) is one of five offerings authorized for Mission Critical National Security Systems (IL5( by the U.S. Department of Defense.( Palantir
- Palantir Technologies - Simple English Wikipedia, the free ...
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia ## Contents # Palantir Technologies Palantir Technologies is an information technology company based in Denver, Colorado. it was founded by Peter Thiel. The company's name comes from The Lord of the Rings where the magical palantíri were "seeing-stones." Palantir Gotham is used by the United States Intelligence Community. It is also used by German state police in Hesse and by police in Denmark to assess how likely people are to commit crimes. [...] | v t") e Companies of the Nasdaq-100") index | | | --- | --- |
- What does Palantir actually do? - YouTube
for the Department of Defense. You have a problem. We will solve it. All right, so here's the deal. Palantir is a data analytics software company who got its start during the war on terror, and today has big ambitions to be the U.S. Department of Defense's go to problem solver. The idea of a Silicon Valley company saying, we kill things, we kill people like, you know, that we're interested in serving the Department of Defense [...] I began my investigation on Bing. Com which I use to type in google.com, which I used to search for Palantir. A quick spin through their site will tell you that Palantir is all about AI powered automation for every decision, and delivering mission critical outcomes for the West's most powerful institute. Sentences that boldly ask the question what if Genghis Khan and Ronald Reagan had a baby who wrote mind numbingly boring marketing copy? However, I did come across one thing [...] well beyond the military. During the Covid 19 pandemic, the US contracted Palantir to track outbreak data and set up a system to distribute vaccines. More controversially, Palantir reportedly helped Immigration and Customs Enforcement with all sorts of stuff, including a surveillance system, to plan and organize workplace raids on an original contract worth as much as $127 million. During the 20 tens, the New Orleans Police Department ran a secretive partnership with Palantir
- How A 'Deviant' Philosopher Built Palantir, A CIA-Funded Data ...
Palantir lives the realities of its customers: the NSA, the FBI and the CIA--an early investor through its In-Q-Tel venture fund--along with an alphabet soup of other U.S. counterterrorism and military agencies. In the last five years Palantir has become the go-to company for mining massive data sets for intelligence and law enforcement applications, with a slick software interface and coders who parachute into clients' headquarters to customize its programs. Palantir turns messy swamps of [...] In a post-9/11 world Thiel wanted to sell those Palantiri-like powers to the growing national security complex: His concept for Palantir was to use the fraud-recognition software designed for PayPal to stop terrorist attacks. But from the beginning the libertarian saw Palantir as an antidote to--not a tool for--privacy violations in a society slipping into a vise of security. "It was a mission-oriented company," says Thiel, who has personally invested $40 million in Palantir and today serves as [...] And now Palantir is emerging from the shadow world of spies and special ops to take corporate America by storm. The same tools that can predict ambushes in Iraq are helping pharmaceutical firms analyze drug data. According to a former JPMorgan Chase staffer, they've saved the firm hundreds of millions of dollars by addressing issues from cyberfraud to distressed mortgages. A Palantir user at a bank can, in seconds, see connections between a Nigerian Internet protocol address, a proxy server
- The history behind Silicon Valley most mysterious tech company
Palantir’s software enables governments and private enterprises to make the most of their data. For instance, Airbus was able to cut the time needed to fix a production mistake on their assembly lines from 24 to 17 days, saving millions of dollars. FCA uses Palantir in its Ferrari F1 Scuderia. At JP Morgan, instead, Palantir now-dismissed Metropolis was used to spy on colleagues to find sign of disgruntlement – a practise that stopped when senior executives found out they were being watched. [...] Palantir reputation has been injured in recent years by some of its contracts. I.C.E, for example, used Palantir’s software to track and arrest clandestine immigrants in the US, and this has sparked the anger of human-rights activists. Moreover, right-wing and outspoken Trump supporter Peter Thiel, one of the four co-founders, is also a reason of controversy. Palantir has been at the centre of political debate for a time: Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, for instance, has [...] But the most controversial aspect about Palantir’s software comes from its use by the U.S. government. Palantir began supplying platoons directly in Afghanistan in 2011, and its software was able to avoid several ambushes and, all in all, make the soldiers job much safer. Following this success, it has been used by police departments (L.A.P.D., N.Y.P.D.) and state agencies in the US, France, and the UK. Its most recent contracts with I.C.E., though, sparked anger among human right activists as
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View on DBPediaLocation Data
Palantir, Genoenhuis, Geldrop, Geldrop-Mierlo, Noord-Brabant, Nederland, 5663 SE, Nederland
Coordinates: 51.4129768, 5.5444515
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