Let's be fair: almost everything is linked to Peter Thiel's dark magic company these days.
The UK's NHS is already quite close with Palantir: https://www.palantir.com/uk/
Let's be fair: almost everything is linked to Peter Thiel's dark magic company these days.
The UK's NHS is already quite close with Palantir: https://www.palantir.com/uk/
As are Bedfordshire police: https://libertyinvestigates.org.uk/articles/uk-police-workin...
The usual suspect.
And he was in the Epstein files, allegedly meeting with Russian officials repeatedly at Epstein’s place. One of which is a handler for assets of their intelligence service.
We should not be doing business with people mentioned that many times in the files.
Why? Because he was convicted and punished for a crime many years ago?
Should we never do business with anyone who was convicted of a crime?
What crime was he convicted of? Surely that has some bearing?
"a crime"
Health service buys software from massive multinational. They also work with Google, Azure and AWS. More news at 11.
> buys software
To do what, exactly? This is public money being spent. Why are you so eager to be ignorant of it?
> from massive multinational.
Let's be honest: "Health company buys software from US defense monopolist."
> They also work with Google, Azure and AWS
Yes, and you and I can also buy those products and use them, do you use any of palantirs products in your daily life?
who is ignorant of anything? Foundry is a pretty decently known product now, plenty of companies and gov departments use it. It's a B2B product but anybody can go spin up a test account or read the docs, none of it is secret?
> It's a B2B product
And how exactly is the NHS making use of it? What problems is it solving for them? What new capabilities do they have now that they've deployed it?
> who is ignorant of anything?
B2B is as generic of a label as you can get.
They have a whole website to answer all these questions, and there's a fair bit on youtube etc? Honestly, I'm not sure why "what if we had a consistently available tech stack and data model" is that far fetched an idea though.
https://digital.nhs.uk/services/federated-data-platform
> "what if we had a consistently available tech stack and data model"
And Palantir is the only company that provides this? They didn't have this before? After they bought it what changed? Again, what new capabilities do they have now that they lacked before? What required them to make a deal with a defense contractor for a "consistent data model?" Did other ERP vendors not exist?
It's 2026. Make this make sense. Justify their decision don't excuse it with hand waving.
> is that far fetched an idea though.
You are working really hard to ignore reality here. Basic accountability in spending tax payer funds is not a "far fetched idea."
> https://digital.nhs.uk/services/federated-data-platform
The deeper you dig into that site the more you discover the supposed benefits still had to be developed locally and merely rely on Foundry as a database. You're telling me the NHS had to make this highly questionable decision because they couldn't find a database vendor?
This stinks. I'm sorry you can't or aren't willing to admit you smell it.