Say No to Palantir in Europe

(action.wemove.eu)

598 points | by Betelbuddy 2 days ago ago

138 comments

  • niekiepriekie 2 days ago ago

    But it’s already widespread in Europe, or at least in the Netherlands. Amsterdam Airport uses it, as do the Dutch police and the Dutch army. So shouldn’t it be: kick out Palantir?

  • redanddead 2 days ago ago

    say no to palantir in america too

    they're giving startups an awful name in the eyes of the people, supposedly by the guy teaching others how to do startups, good grief

    • y1n0 a day ago ago

      What’s the definition of startup these days? Palantir is 23 years old with 4000+ employees. It’s publicly traded. What makes it a startup?

  • mrlonglong 2 days ago ago

    The UK has decided to terminate Palantir contracts when they become due for renewal. Not before time.

    • tremon 12 hours ago ago

      Are you referring to the same UK that only a week ago gave Palantir access to the entire data lake of the FCA, the financial regulator and crime watchdog?

      https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/mar/22/palantir-...

    • masfuerte 2 days ago ago

      Do you have a reference for this? There's been a lot of talk from ministers about reviewing contracts when break clauses allow, but I haven't seen anything definitive and this still seems to be a matter for individual departments.

    • hkt 2 days ago ago

      Not before handing over an enormous cache of NHS patient data to them during the pandemic. If memory serves, this was not kept on NHS hardware or even NHS controlled compute.

      • mrlonglong 2 days ago ago

        Yes whoever decided to let them do this has a lot of explaining to do. This data should never have left the UK.

        • GuestFAUniverse 2 days ago ago

          Grab them by the balls and make sure they are never able to make a political decision with such an impact again.

      • Silhouette 2 days ago ago

        If memory serves, this was not kept on NHS hardware or even NHS controlled compute.

        Does anyone have a verifiable source for that? It would be extremely controversial if true and even among the big civil liberties and privacy advocacy groups in the UK I have never seen anyone make that claim.

        The defence to using Palantir by British government departments and public services has typically been that Palantir only provides the technology and the data itself is still held and processed in the UK under the native organisation's control. Even this is still controversial because of issues like the CLOUD Act and the general reputation of Palantir.

        But that is a long way from allowing the mass export of sensitive personal data to a US firm without the data subjects' knowledge or consent. That looks just plain illegal under our existing data protection legislation. Green lighting it - even in the panic phase during COVID - would probably be controversial enough to end a few political careers at least. It might even leave enough of a cloud over the party in government at the time to affect a future election.

        • mrlonglong a day ago ago

          You said it better than I could have.

      • crimsoneer a day ago ago

        "if memory serves" is an interesting way to phrase "I'm just making shit up"

  • lokimedes 2 days ago ago

    Even Alex Karp openly recommends European countries to roll their own alternatives. If anyone in Europe insists on Palantir it’s by their own volition.

    The hard work is integration and data workflows, that is hard work regardless of the chosen “exploitation interface”.

  • periodjet a day ago ago

    > Our political system has served the elite and maximised profit for too long, and now we’re seeing devastating effects on our environment, our economy, our democracy, and our everyday lives. That’s because the systems that are currently in place are built to benefit the rich and powerful. We want a better Europe. One that takes climate action seriously, puts well-being first, welcomes those seeking refuge with open arms, listens to the needs of people, and protects nature.

    These people are telling themselves (and others) stories of their own creation, disconnected from any empirical testing of the reality around them. Disturbing to witness, particularly how many people read something like this and without a shred of critical thought say “damn, that sounds good! Sign me up!”

    • lovelearning a day ago ago

      To me, the assumptions in your comment about them and their views seem much more like stories of your own creation, likely without any empirical testing of the reality around you.

    • thrance a day ago ago

      What exactly do you disagree with here? The statement is not very substantive and a bit simplistic, but it's not exactly wrong either. Inequalities are rising, and the system is biased in favor of the owning class. The environment is more often than not forgotten about in lawmaking, which will lead to dire consequences down the line.

  • linhns 2 days ago ago

    Europe can regulate anything out. Palantir should be no different.

    • tinco 2 days ago ago

      No we can't. In the early 2000s we desperately tried to get our governments to be less dependent on Microsoft and we completely failed. Europe is not a federation like the US, worse many of the countries in Europe themselves are governed much like federations. We are easy prey for big American corporations. It's easy for Palantir to sell their product and then a thousand little government organizations will claim there simply is no alternative at the same quality level.

      • noisy_boy 2 days ago ago

        > In the early 2000s we desperately tried to get our governments to be less dependent on Microsoft and we completely failed

        You didn't have the great unifying dislike of the orange man as a motivating factor then. Now you do and I would wager there is significant public support behind getting away from reliance on the US.

      • tossandthrow 2 days ago ago

        Now, the EU can, using the anti coercion instrument.

    • lpcvoid 2 days ago ago

      And I am very happy about that superpower. Regulation is a very good thing, specially when wielded against US big tech.

  • gobdovan a day ago ago

    'Say "Yes" to Palantir not coming to Europe' - would have been the wording if the vote were organized by Romanian politicians. (ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Romanian_presidential_imp...)

  • __natty__ 2 days ago ago

    I wonder what the alternative for Europe might be? A new project to launch, or is there an existing solution? Siren? Argon? In any case, it could be a great opportunity for Europe to create new jobs whilst increasing its sovereignty.

    • tsimionescu 2 days ago ago

      Palantir's technology, as its own name suggests, is inherently dangerous, regardless of who controls it. The right alternative is to simply not build capabilities similar to Palantir in the EU - ideally, to legally forbid building them at all. This type of aggregated data flow simply gives too much control to whoever has access to it, and thus greatly harms democracy.

    • Xelbair 2 days ago ago

      Why?

      why would we need to fund and make Europen Alternative to Surveilance (tm) when we could just you know - not have it at all?

    • possiblelion 19 hours ago ago

      SensusQ from Estonia does pretty much this, but is sovereign and data is held by the end-users, not sent to the US (or anywhere else) www.sensusq.com

    • wolvoleo 2 days ago ago

      Even if it's nothing that would be a big win.

    • Bombthecat 2 days ago ago

      d.AP, itemis, datawalk, helsing.

      There are a few alternatives, depending what you want.

      • aitchnyu 2 days ago ago

        Did Helsing get its name from the fictional vampire hunter family?

        • rvz 2 days ago ago

          All of them are just as bad a Palantir.

          • Bombthecat a day ago ago

            No that's not true, some try to do it by the book ( ai act, gdpr, and follow German law etc) but they won't have any chance on the market, because those who ignore any law will provide more information / control etc for police, state etc etc

  • lucasay 2 days ago ago

    Petitions don’t do much on their own, but they’re often how pressure starts. And ‘not European issues’ feels off when these companies operate globally anyway.

    • LightBug1 2 days ago ago

      Pressure is building, thankfully. It's not just petitions now, but legal groups getting involved, etc. At least in the UK. Hopefully it spreads like wildfire around Europe. The orange Oompa Loompa is likely helping kindle those flames nicely.

  • epolanski 2 days ago ago

    Instantly signed up.

    I'm already moving most of my clients out of any US-based offering.

    Azure and Jira are sticky, but they'll be out sooner or later.

    • KellyCriterion 2 days ago ago

      Ex-Colleagues are launching a startup right now: No US-Services from the beginning on, only OpenSource and this new EU-Office thingy.

      I think more companies will join the train? Esp new & smaller ones, for sure there is no option for bigCorp like ASML to be free of US-cloud, but maybe its gaining traction.

      • gip 2 days ago ago

        Surprised by this take. Building a startup is already insanely hard. So I wouldn’t like to add more challenge by spending time integrating with non-US services if they are not top just because of my political views.

        I feel a better answer is for Europe to build real, competitive alternatives to US services.

        • shofmn 11 hours ago ago

          This is just one example, but I think worth sharing:

          I've been running a new solution in beta for a while and am about to go commercial (Germany). In my solution, it's essential to keep personal data safe and ensuring the customer it's not shared with anybody else.

          I used Azure and AWS in the past, but stopped. Using only German data centers & services is a selling point for my customers and builds additional trust. Aside the initial effort, I don't see any big technological disadvantages for my use-case and actually pay less now for operating everything.

        • cineticdaffodil 2 days ago ago

          The eu can not move and function in any capacity standalone. The moment the is dropped out the eu tried to fill that hole with the other allies atoll.

        • tinodb 2 days ago ago

          So now you know how much it matter :)

        • cbeach a day ago ago

          I love seeing companies set meritocracy aside for partisan political posturing.

          All people who run companies should relish their competition behaving sub-optimally.

          • Schmerika a day ago ago

            > sub-optimally

            Optimal for society? Optimal for the Epstein class? Or do you mean optimal for the owner, personally, in the very short term?

            Because that's the choice people are making these days. It's not really "partisan political posturing" to divest from countries running pedo blackmail rings on the world, or arming genocide, or bombing hundreds of schools. Targeting journalists, then lying about them to try and justify it. Pulling the plug on incubators. Targeting entire families with shoddy AI. Bombing civilian power plants and ambulances and hospitals and so on and on.

            There's nothing partisan or posturing about saying "fuck all that". That's just your duty as a human being, the basic bare minimum. That duty doesn't get discarded just because you run a company or have evil competitors trying to race you to the bottom.

            When companies are complicit with committing heinous atrocities at scale, and screwing up the world economy for their own gain, I find very little 'merit' in that. Is 'meritocracy' a purely financial term in your view? Do 'respect for life' and 'trust' and other nebulous concepts (which don't immediately affect the balance sheet) have merit?

            • cbeach 20 hours ago ago

              > Optimal for society? Optimal for the Epstein class? Or do you mean optimal for the owner

              No. Optimal for employees and customers, which is, in turn, optimal for society.

              Making technology choices based on political ideology rather than merit is bad for the interests of both employees and customers.

              The hyperbolic statements in your comment suggest your worldview comes from an online echo chamber. With respect, I think you'd benefit from consuming news from a variety of different sources. Think critically about the biases and agendas of the media.

              I suspect none of your favourite media sources mentioned the illegal cluster munitions that Iran used to destroy an Israeli kindergarten (among other civilian buildings) on Saturday: https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/iran-us-israel-war-updates-...

              War is an ugly business. Outcomes are rarely so pure that we can single out "good guys" and "bad guys". But hopefully once you've examined the facts objectively you'll see that the Israeli government is more ethical than Hamas, and you'll see that the American government (yes, even Orange Man Bad) is better than the Ayatollahs of Iran and their IRGC.

              • Schmerika 17 hours ago ago

                > The hyperbolic statements in your comment suggest your worldview comes from an online echo chamber.

                No, nothing hyperbolic whatsoever. Everything I said is trivial to source.

                If you believe otherwise then you might follow your own advice - this is all well documented stuff. You can even see the video of those premature babies that were left to rot by Israel, if you don't believe me.

                No, I'm not saying that to shock you; it's an important documented fact. Like the prison rapists being celebrated on national Israeli TV, or the zip-tied teenagers run over by steamrollers, or the ambulances shot up and buried in a shallow grave, or Hind Rajab being used as bait for another ambulance, or any of the other thousands upon thousands of well documented atrocities which the US has helped to arm and enable.

                > I suspect none of your favourite media sources mentioned the illegal cluster munitions that Iran used to destroy an Israeli kindergarten (among other civilian buildings) on Saturday

                A kindergarten! Wow. That really is atrocious. Were there 100 schoolgirls in it, like the elementary school America blew up? Your source says no, but you seem really incensed by this property damage.

                Is that worse though, in your view, than the 498 Iranian schools [0] targeted in the last months? Is it worse than destroying just about every school and hospital in Gaza?

                > War is an ugly business

                Being at war doesn't excuse war crimes - especially when the war begins because you don't like how well negotiations are going so you bomb a school killing 100 little girls, while killing the leader of a country with his grandchildren and torpedoing an unarmed ship.

                > hopefully once you've examined the facts objectively you'll see that the Israeli government is more ethical than Hamas

                To say this after the last three years requires something fundamental to be missing within you. I can not help you find it again. I wish I could; I truly do.

                > you'll see that the American government (yes, even Orange Man Bad) is better than the Ayatollahs of Iran and their IRGC

                Even if that were true, by whatever undefined metric you're defining as 'better', how does that give you the right to commit hundreds of war crimes and atrocities to change their government?

                You might want to read up on recent US history btw - and how we're perceived right now [1]. There are many very good reasons why the world considers the US to be the greatest threat to global peace, stability and democracy [2], [3]; not just since "orange man" but since 2003 [4]. Iran never even come close.

                0 - https://truthout.org/articles/us-israeli-attacks-have-damage...

                1 - https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/14/america-allies-divi...

                2 - https://truthout.org/articles/people-worldwide-name-us-as-a-...

                3 - https://brilliantmaps.com/threat-to-peace/

                4 - https://www.democracynow.org/2003/10/31/headlines/poll_israe...

      • polyamid23 2 days ago ago

        What new EU-Office thingy?

    • SlightlyLeftPad 2 days ago ago

      Good news, Atlassian is technically an Australian company.

      • kakacik 2 days ago ago

        5-eyes, a bit tricky... but yeah anything that isnt a direct data pipeline to US gov and 3-letter agencies is a massive longterm win, in security and economy

      • bdangubic 2 days ago ago

        they host theirs services/data in Tasmania?

      • epolanski 2 days ago ago

        I don't think it is. I liked a simpler world we lived without having to worry or look where a company was from.

        But since this administration has started to threaten allies and keeps this nonsensical trade balance and tariffs argument (which never accounts for the very bulk of what US really exports: IT and financial services which are never included in the trade balance nonsense) you need to answer in some way.

        And with tensions rising staying on US services is becoming a strategic risk.

        • e2le 2 days ago ago

          > which never accounts for the very bulk of what US really exports: IT and financial services

          Given the growing demand to move away from US services and towards European alternatives, I wonder what the US will look like in 10 years if this move gains significant momentum.

    • beerws 2 days ago ago

      I of course do not know your specific usage and requirements, but Berlin-based OpenProject might be a suitable and mature Jira-alternative for you - in addition to being outside US jurisdiction their services are available both on-prem/self-hosted and cloud-based.

      They even have a specific Jira-migration tool: https://www.openproject.org/docs/installation-and-operations...

    • tankenmate 2 days ago ago

      Jira is Australian.

  • chme 2 days ago ago

    I'm just wondering why this isn't a European Citizen Initiative (ECI)...

    I could not find any information on what kind of influence a online-petition on wemove.eu would have...

  • karl11 2 days ago ago

    I don't think there has ever been a company so poorly understood (willfully or otherwise) as Palantir. They make a software platform, it does not come with any data, does not come connected to any datasources, etc. You can literally sign up right now for a trial and see this for yourself. It looks the same if you were to purchase a license. This headline might as well say 'Say No to PostgreSQL' or 'Say No to Excel' or 'Say No to Salesforce', etc. Wild.

    • tasuki 2 days ago ago

      > This headline might as well say 'Say No to PostgreSQL' or 'Say No to Excel' or 'Say No to Salesforce', etc. Wild.

      Wat? These are wildly different things:

      > Say No to PostgreSQL

      Sure, if you self-host it, this would be a stupid thing to say.

      > Say No to Excel

      A little worse: it's proprietary and who knows what it does and where it sends your data.

      > Say No to Salesforce

      Way worse: they host the data, and who knows what they do with it.

      • simianwords 2 days ago ago

        A lot of words but you could have simply searched to know that Palantir offers self hosting.

    • text0404 a day ago ago

      Palantir's founders and executives are aware of what their tools are designed for and what they enable, and they're proud of their role.

      Salesforce, Microsoft, and PostgresSQL contributors aren't bragging about how their products enable lethal military operations.

    • porridgeraisin 2 days ago ago

      I think when people go against palantir, they are specifically against gotham - their govt/intelligence-only product. It is true that gotham is an app built on top of foundry just like any business builds on top of foundry. But in this case since palantir itself is the one building it (and heavily marketing it may I say) they get the bad rep for it.

      If XYZ Inc. built gotham with palantir supplying them foundry, palantir can claim to be "just like postgres".

      This all matters only if you're actually against gotham / automated surveillance, of course, and believe that it was not happening until alex karp.

    • surgical_fire 2 days ago ago

      Is their code open? Can you somehow attest that the data it ingests is fully under control of the client that uses the platform?

      The comparison to PostgreSQL in particular is very poor in that regard.

      • simianwords 2 days ago ago

        You can self host it on premises. I think the comparison is fair for most of the products offered by Palantir.

    • beepbooptheory 2 days ago ago

      Ok but then why? Or, what's your point here? Like what would explain the behavior you are noting if it really is that absurd and seemingly arbitrary? Is the implication that they just have really bad PR?

  • avazhi a day ago ago

    Why though? Palantir does good work.

    • danny_codes a day ago ago

      Their CEO is a loon for one thing. But also the concept of spying is generally unsavory. Nobody wants to be tracked. Palantir has proven that they have no ethical framework for who they work with. Essentially they fill a mercenary role in modern society. Nobody really trusts mercenaries, for obvious reasons.

      • avazhi a day ago ago

        And?

        None of the reasons you’ve given apply to everybody. They do apply to illegal migrants, protestors, and violent criminals though - and others that also cause similar societal problems and disruption. Once again HN - like so many other online meeting spaces - takes for granted that the libertarian and extreme ‘human and civil rights’ tech bro ethos is invariably shared by everybody else. It is not.

    • HDBaseT a day ago ago

      If you're goal is to make everyone's life worse, then maybe good is the right word but for most people, Palantir does evil work.

      • avazhi a day ago ago

        Palantir hasn’t made my life worse, though.

        • HDBaseT 8 hours ago ago

          These things are hard to quantify. Palantir hasn't come into your house and stabbed you (yet) but the deep state surveillance network they enable is concerning and honestly undermines just about everything, voting, politics, equality, etc.

          • avazhi 4 hours ago ago

            > Palantir hasn't come into your house and stabbed you (yet) but the deep state surveillance network they enable is concerning and honestly undermines just about everything, voting, politics, equality, etc.

            Assuming I value democracy as much as you clearly assume I do (which I do not), wtf are you even talking about, man?

  • renewiltord 2 days ago ago

    Oh boy, I'm looking forward to the brand new EU program to allocate one million dollars to eligible startups that can develop a weapons and targeting platform so long as all forms are filed well and a registered notary has read out the bill to all participants and each participant has read out the application so that informed consent is received.

  • grokcodec 2 days ago ago

    "powerful company enables genocide in Gaza" first sentence flags this as a complete load of malarcky

  • bicx 2 days ago ago

    No to Palantir in Europe

    • layer8 2 days ago ago

      So you used voice dictation?

  • chopete3 2 days ago ago

    >> Palantir enables genocide in Gaza, helps ICE separate families, and fuels Trump’s war with Iran.

    Out of technical curiosity,where do we find more on how Palatir is helping technically?.

    Types of ML jobs they are running?

    Open source or AI models they are using.

  • helf 2 days ago ago

    I love how Palantir is comically evil. Their logo being the Palantir from LoTR (duh) and all. It's wild to me lol. They don't even try to pretend anymore.

  • 0x3f 2 days ago ago

    > A powerful company enables genocide in Gaza, helps ICE separate families, and fuels Trump’s war with Iran.

    Ah yes, European issues

    • Aromasin 2 days ago ago

      It's a European issue because we look to the US and now appreciate more than ever the need to introduce barriers to stop temporary fascist governments doing the same permanent damage they have done in the US. Our democratic systems are just as vulnerable to populist leaders taking power. One of those barriers we must erect is the elimination of corporation with unfettered access to institutional data that can be used by fascist governments to maintain or grow their power base.

      • 0x3f 2 days ago ago

        It's quite odd how Europeans will see and describe themselves only in terms of being a US vassal.

        • yulker 2 days ago ago

          they functionally have been since ww2. why is it odd that they have a clear understanding of their relative position to the hegemonic power?

          • 0x3f 2 days ago ago

            China's been behind too, but at least they're trying something.

    • kylecazar 2 days ago ago

      Things Palantir does in other countries is fine cause for not wanting it deployed in your own

      • 0x3f 2 days ago ago

        Perhaps, but one would think those aren't the prime issues meriting first mention. I went in hoping for details of what Palantir is doing wrong _in Europe_, but all I got was some rallying the base cliches.

        • kakacik 2 days ago ago

          We prefer seeing all humans as equal, and not setting their value based on their passports like US does.

          Also, shit done elsewhere will be repeated in all other places, no reason to doubt that.

    • pavlov 2 days ago ago

      Not yet because they’re not operating in Europe yet.

      There are enough far-right (and generally Putin-aligned, like Hungary) forces on the continent that they’d love to feed.

      • 0x3f 2 days ago ago

        > Not yet because they’re not operating in Europe yet.

        They're definitely operating in Europe. They literally have 15 offices scattered around.

    • encom 2 days ago ago

      Also "ICE separate[s] families" is such a ridiculous mischaracterization it makes me question all their other arguments.

      • esseph 2 days ago ago

        > ICE separate[s] families" is such a ridiculous mischaracterization

        It's accurate. They do separate families. How or why doesn't matter, the fact stands in its own. It's not a "mischaracterization", it's a fact.

        • 0x3f 2 days ago ago

          If context is irrelevant then every country in Europe already separates families, and thus how can this be a complaint?

          • esseph a day ago ago

            Believe it or not, it's possible for more than one person or entity to do something. I know, it's really incredible to think about! John and Bill can both scam Elizabeth, even though they live in different countries!

            But apparently I can't complain because they're both criminals and I can only complain about one! It says in the rulebook!

            • 0x3f a day ago ago

              I'm not sure you've quite understood the conversation.

              • esseph a day ago ago

                I'm not sure you understand what an objective truth is, so anything else is really irrelevant.

        • encom a day ago ago

          So do the police/courts if your dad goes to jail. It's incidental to their purpose.

          • esseph a day ago ago

            "The purpose of a system is what it does"

            • its_ethan a day ago ago

              So... what exactly is your argument here? The children of a man who is convicted and sent to prison should also go to prison, so as to avoid separation? Or that we just don't send men to prison if they have children?

  • deaux 2 days ago ago

    Sure, Europe should absolutely be saying no to Palantir.

    However

    > A powerful company enables genocide in Gaza, helps ICE separate families, and fuels Trump’s war with Iran

    So does Google, so does Meta, so does Oracle. What do you think all that Palantir software runs on in the clouds? On Palantir's own huge datacenters? They don'thave those. The huge bulk of it runs on it on clouds provided my Microsoft, Amazon, Google.

    Meta in particular causes such ridiculously larger amounts of societal damage that focusing so much energy on Palantir specifically is a dead giveaway it's not really about harm caused, it's about optics. Because they themselves likely use WhatsApp and Instagram, yet they don't knowingly use Palantir products.

    If you're going to single out one US tech company as "we need to stop cooperating with them", I don't see how it can be any other than Meta. It's like telling someone morbidly obese to stop eating a single cookie per day rather than the 5 cheese pizzas they're also having. Maybe the cookie is slightly worse per gram, but it's also completely ineffective to focus on.

    • lovelearning a day ago ago
    • Mordisquitos 2 days ago ago

      Indeed. It is very disappointing that they chose that as the opening paragraph of their "Why" section, without even making the attempt to relate those points as to why Palantir in Europe would be bad for European citizens.

      As someone who strongly supports European digital sovereignty and eliminating dependency on the US, I'm frankly very tired of so damn much of the activist discourse around these issues revolving around US-centred topics. Yes, sure, Gaza is not the US, and the US-Israel war with Iran is bad for Europe, but those are damn well not the reasons we should say no to Palantir.

      If the Israel-Gaza conflict hadn't reignited a couple of years ago and thus Gaza wasn't on everybody's minds, and if the Iran attacks hadn't (yet) happened, should we then have nothing to say as to why we don't want Palantir than it's provision of services for internal US immigration policies? Maybe I should be grateful they haven't also listed Palantir being involved in period-tracking of American women in the wake of the reversal of Roe-vs-Wade.

      Jesus Christ, won't the most vocal pro-European activists please stop making everything about US talking points, and start being able to take a stance from basic principles and our own interests?

      • onetimeusename a day ago ago

        I suspect that if Palantir had the same exact business model but the CEO had supported Kamala Harris, this campaign would not exist. Or if Palantir had said it supported targeting "fascists" the same people denouncing it would be supporters. So if you're actually serious about sovereignty it probably needs a whole campaign around that cause.

      • scorpionfeet 2 days ago ago

        One at a time. Just because you can’t stop all crime doesn’t mean you don’t try to stop any crime. What is it with HN bros and their love of fallicies?

        • MrScruff 2 days ago ago

          Calling everyone you disagree with a 'bro' doesn't make your point any more convincing.

          • scorpionfeet 2 days ago ago

            Chill bro it’s just a joke. Sensitive.

    • rvz 2 days ago ago

      > If you're going to single out one US tech company as "we need to stop cooperating with them", I don't see how it can be any other than Meta.

      Meta's products also profited off of the Rohingya genocide in Myanmar. [0]

      The lawsuit won't do anything, the employees at Meta are happy with all of that and Meta does not care.

      Anyone would have to be morally bankrupt to work at any of those companies and then knowingly put ex-$COMPANY in their bio as a badge to show they helped contribute to a genocide instead of stopping it.

      So as long as Meta paid them, no-one cares.

      [0] https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/amnesty-report-finds-face...

      • deaux a day ago ago

        > The lawsuit won't do anything, the employees at Meta are happy with all of that and Meta does not care.

        Correct, which is why my comment gets downvoted and these posts get mass upvotes and comments: it makes the legions of (ex-)FAANG HNers feel better about themselves.

    • g-b-r 2 days ago ago

      The owners of the other companies are at least not as openly opposed to democracy, though.

      Meta sure causes more damage right now, but banning Palantir, which wouldn't even cause big problems, is an absolute no-brainer

      • deaux a day ago ago

        Being "open" about it or not doesn't matter. In a sense it's even worse if they're less upfront about it.

        Larry Elisson, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are cut from the exact same cloth. It's beyond doubt.

      • g-b-r 2 days ago ago

        Hmm well except Oracle's owner..

  • gradus_ad 2 days ago ago

    Say No to Subsidizing European Defense

  • simianwords 2 days ago ago

    How do we differentiate between genuine empathy and love for the world and simple virtue signalling?

    If USA weren't the one safeguarding (contentious but please read on) the world and its modern interests then we would end up with something much worse.

    If you only focus locally, it is quite easy to dismiss any form of killing, any form of surveillance and any form of inconvenience. This is "Defund the Police" meme all over again.

    I gain social points by showing my disgust against the killings and murder done by the west. I gain nothing by promoting what they safeguard and promote that is necessary for the world to function. Such dynamics will lead to self ownage at the long run but social status points for oneself in the short term.

    • frm88 a day ago ago

      USA weren't the one safeguarding (contentious but please read on) the world

      Another commenter posted a link collection of Palantir "safeguarding... the world" here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47564423. I feel you accurately described it as being contentious.

    • gopher_space a day ago ago

      > How do we differentiate between genuine empathy and love for the world and simple virtue signalling?

      We don't bother doing that because it's a waste of time.

      > I gain social points

      You gain no social points.

      • simianwords a day ago ago

        >We don't bother doing that because it's a waste of time.

        It literally isn't. I'm not sure what you are trying to say here.

    • kelipso 2 days ago ago

      > we would end up with something much worse.

      Whenever I see this, I recognize it as obvious scaremongering.

      • simianwords 2 days ago ago

        When I saw "defund the policy" I recognised it as virtue signalling.

        • bdangubic a day ago ago

          Same people that scoff at “Defund the Police” rejoice “Defund the Dept of Education” (and vice versa)

          • simianwords a day ago ago

            Question: do you agree police must be defunded?

            • bdangubic a day ago ago

              I agree that in both cases there is an issue that needs to be solved (see NYPD budget as example) so don’t take “defund” at face value but more like “radical changes are needed”

              • simianwords a day ago ago

                The scoffing of "defund the policy" was specifically at the face value interpretation.

                • bdangubic a day ago ago

                  if you want to tear something apart to rebuild peacefully this is the way. their salaries are paid by public money so defund, get everyone out and rebuild. not unlike dept of education which may also need a similar treatment to rebuild

        • southerntofu a day ago ago

          Most of humanity has lived without police for most of its existence. It's not an inherent part of life. And in many places, the police is a very recent (few centuries old) invention with ties to oppressive structures such as slavery and colonialism.

          Whether abolishing the police, or defunding the police (to deescalate the militarization), both are proposals formulated by serious academics and politicians, whether you agree or not. It's not virtue signalling. If anything, "defund the police" is still very badly regarded outside very small circles and there's no credit to be gained by holding such positions.

  • mcosta 2 days ago ago

    Europe needs its own Palatir

  • nicklo 2 days ago ago

    or say yes? decel mentality like this is why europe is falling behind. some poor startup will try to backfill these contracts to be the new palantir of europe only to be cut at the knees by regulation and more outcry think piece boycotts like this. rinse and repeat until the us and china become the only relevant acceleration hubs on earth during the singularity

  • delichon 2 days ago ago

    Isn't this a bit like foregoing the use of gunpowder because it isn't chivalrous? If your enemies don't agree it doesn't end well.

    • badlibrarian 2 days ago ago

      No, because gunpowder has no loyalty, no terms of service, no American CEO who can be forced to testify before Congress and say interesting things about European defense customers or provide lists of who has a tattoo or not.

    • airstrike 2 days ago ago

      Not at all. It's against using Palantir specifically, not against the idea of something like Palantir "but European".

      It's literally at the very top of the article:

      - Stop signing new contracts with Palantir.

      - Review and phase out existing contracts with the company.

      - Invest in transparent, publicly accountable European alternatives.

      And Palantir isn't like gunpowder, so I'm not even sure the analogy had any legs to begin with

      • raincole 2 days ago ago

        Half of the comments in this thread are expressing how they're very against the idea of something like Palantir "but European". It seems like some Europeans really believe that handicapping themselves is a good idea.

    • drums8787 2 days ago ago

      No. The means can spoil the end.

    • dfxm12 2 days ago ago

      Can you explain the comparison because on its face and especially given the context in the link, I don't see the connection.

    • gnerd00 2 days ago ago

      perhaps, but civil law is a negotiated contract including rights of all involved. If a tech conglomerate invents new applications, are they now exempt from civil law?

      The era of the Nation State began when courts did have real means to enforce against powerful rogues. The suggestion that simply applying a new weaponized technology overrides the legal context is regressive.