Palantir: Tracking American Citizens - The Most Powerful Company You’ve Never Heard Of
How the CIA-funded startup turned into a $300B surveillance empire quietly tracking your every move
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Palantir isn’t just another tech company, it’s become the central nervous system of the U.S. government. Its platform now connects data from nearly every major agency: CIA, NSA, FBI, IRS, ICE, and more. What used to be fragmented intelligence scattered across departments is now unified in a single operating system.
This means surveillance is no longer siloed. It’s cross-agency, real-time, and exponentially more powerful. One click can reveal your financials, travel records, communication logs, and personal affiliations, across multiple databases. That level of integration makes Palantir not just a tool for governance, but the core infrastructure behind how modern government operates.
The Ghost in the Machine
The CIA can’t function without it. Neither can the Pentagon. Or Wall Street.
Yet you’ve probably never used its products, never seen a commercial, never downloaded an app. Palantir doesn’t need your attention. It already has your data.
If that sounds dramatic, it’s not. It’s just the world we live in now, where the most powerful companies don’t sell to consumers. They sell to governments, militaries, banks, and law enforcement. They operate in the shadows, but shape everything.
Palantir is the backbone of the U.S. surveillance machine. It hunts terrorists. Tracks financial markets. Predicts crime. Forecasts wars. During COVID, it helped decide who got quarantined, who got vaccinated, and who got flagged for “non-compliance.”
It was embedded into hospitals, factories, border controls, and police departments, without the public ever really knowing. No opt-ins. No appeals. No way out.
I remember the first time I came across Palantir, it wasn’t on the news, it was in a financial report. A company with no profits, nearly two decades old, yet somehow powering the most sensitive agencies on Earth. I was intrigued. Then disturbed.
What makes Palantir different is scale. This isn’t just software, it’s a worldview. One that says: with enough data, you can predict anything. Control everything. Fix the future before it happens.
But what happens when that future belongs to algorithms? What happens when your life is reduced to patterns and scores and risk profiles you never get to see?
Most people are still waking up to this. They think surveillance is about cameras on street poles or cookies in their browser. That’s old news.
Palantir is different. It’s not watching you from the outside. It’s embedded inside the systems that run your life, from your job to your bank to your hospital.
And in 2025, it went from controversial to critical infrastructure overnight.
Once you understand what Palantir is, you’ll never look at the world the same way again.
The Origin Story - A Startup for Spies

Palantir wasn’t built in Silicon Valley garages like most tech legends. It was born in a post-9/11 war room. The mission wasn’t to make life easier, it was to stop the next terrorist attack.
In 2003, PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel had an idea most venture capitalists thought was insane: create software that could predict and prevent terrorism by connecting the dots across massive datasets. Law enforcement had too much data and not enough clarity. The dots were there - flight records, bank transfers, suspicious purchases - but nobody was making the connections fast enough.
Thiel called his project “Palantir,” named after the all-seeing crystal balls from Lord of the Rings that let their holders watch events unfold across vast distances.
He pitched the idea to investors. Most said no. Too paranoid. Too political. Too risky.
But one group said yes - the CIA.
Through its venture arm, In-Q-Tel, the CIA invested $2 million in Palantir. That seed money didn’t come from a desire to disrupt pizza delivery or build another social media app. It came from America’s top spy agency, and they had one requirement: build software that sees everything.
Palantir’s first product was Gotham, and it wasn’t built for civilians. It was designed for the war on terror. Gotham helped analysts merge phone logs, financial records, social media, surveillance footage, even satellite data, into one interactive interface. It didn’t just display data - it told stories.
In 2011, that software helped track down Osama bin Laden. It was Gotham’s ability to visualize hidden networks and map out obscure connections that led U.S. intelligence to a courier, then to the Abbottabad compound, then to the final raid.
That was the moment Palantir went from startup to secret weapon.
After that, the floodgates opened.
The Pentagon signed contracts. So did the FBI, ICE, and the NSA. Police departments across the U.S. began deploying it. Defense contractors embedded it into their own systems. And over time, Palantir’s use cases expanded far beyond military targets.
Terrorists became protesters. Risk assessments became predictive policing. What started as a way to stop the next 9/11 turned into a digital dragnet that could profile and flag almost anyone, anywhere.
But the scariest part? That was just the first product.
Next came Foundry - the version they sell to everyone else.
Foundry: The Corporate Brain That Never Sleeps
If Gotham was designed to serve spies, Foundry was made for CEOs.
While Gotham helped intelligence agents hunt targets, Foundry helped companies tame chaos. It turned disconnected databases - HR spreadsheets, finance reports, supplier inventories, maintenance logs - into a single, searchable nervous system. It didn’t just centralize data, it made it usable.
In a world drowning in information, Foundry promised clarity.
The pitch was simple: take every data stream your business produces and fuse them into one dashboard. Then build internal tools that ride on top of it. Imagine Google Sheets, ChatGPT, SAP, and Excel - all merged into one powerful interface. That’s Foundry.
But it wasn’t just for productivity.
Airbus used Foundry to detect when plane parts might fail - before they failed.
Ferrari used it to simulate and optimize race-day decisions.
Oil companies used it to track pipelines.
Hospitals used it to forecast ICU demand.
The power came from integration. Foundry could sync your ERP system with your CRM, your security cameras with your payroll, your satellite data with your invoices. And once that happened, the real magic began: predictive analytics.
What’s about to break?
Who’s likely to quit?
Where is fraud happening?
How can we do this 10% faster?
Foundry didn't just answer those questions. It told you which questions to ask.
But the same technology that made businesses smarter also made them more invasive.
JPMorgan reportedly used Palantir to spy on its own employees. Emails, phone logs, badge swipes, web traffic - all fed into Foundry. They built heat maps of employee movement, tracked bathroom breaks, even flagged “risky” behavior.
It wasn’t just compliance. It was surveillance.
Walmart, Tyson Foods, and other massive employers used similar setups. Thermal scanners at entrances fed temperature data into Palantir’s engine. Anyone who looked “off” could be pulled from the shift, no pay until cleared. In practice, this became a union-busting tool. Entire teams disappeared from rosters overnight for being tagged “contact risks.”
Palantir's strength - its ability to unify and weaponize data - is also its danger.
During COVID, governments and corporations fed real-time health data into Foundry: test results, QR code check-ins, Bluetooth exposure alerts, biometric scans. In places like Australia and Singapore, the system auto-generated lockdown orders, travel bans, even ankle bracelet alerts. Miss a booster? Get flagged. Walk outside your cabin for 30 seconds? Expect a visit.
It became clear: Foundry wasn’t just a data tool. It was the operating system for control.
And the bigger it got, the harder it became to see the line between efficiency and authoritarianism.
How Palantir Quietly Took Over the World
Palantir didn’t take over the world with headlines. It did it with contracts.
While the public was distracted by Big Tech drama - Facebook, TikTok, Elon - Palantir was quietly embedding itself deep into the core of governments, militaries, and Fortune 500 companies.
It started with a $2 million CIA investment after 9/11. Today, over 56% of Palantir’s revenue comes from the U.S. government, powering everything from immigration control to battlefield logistics. But that's just the beginning.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Palantir’s real reach became visible.
The Department of Health and Human Services handed Palantir the job of building HHS Protect, a real-time dashboard tracking hospitalizations, ICU bed availability, and testing results. But it didn’t stop at numbers.
Names, addresses, geolocation from smartphones, and even “risk scores” were fed into the system. If your data labeled you as “non-compliant” or “hesitant,” it could trigger door-to-door visits or additional monitoring. Most people had no idea this was happening. It was surveillance under the banner of safety.
In states like New York and California, Palantir dashboards were used to track who had and hadn’t been vaccinated. Health workers carried printouts of individuals’ names and addresses. If you were flagged, you got a visit.
Corporate employers joined in too. Dozens of companies, especially in healthcare and logistics, used Palantir to power “Health Passports” - systems that tracked employee vaccination status, test results, and contact tracing. Miss a test? The system could auto-suspend you from work. No HR manager needed.

Internationally, it was even more dystopian.
In Australia, Palantir powered the Howard Springs quarantine facility. Every movement - biometric scans, drone footage, QR code check-ins - fed into a timeline. Step outside your cabin? A guard would show up within 30 seconds, tablet in hand.
In Singapore, if you were within five meters of a COVID-positive person for more than 15 minutes, a Palantir-powered system auto-generated a stay-home notice. Police got the order instantly. Violators were tagged and monitored.
Canada used Palantir to enforce border crossings via the ArriveCAN app, which merged cellphone location with vaccine records. If the system didn’t like your story, or your phone had been off-grid for too long, you could get a $5,000 fine and a forced quarantine at your own expense.
And that’s just the COVID-era. The real bombshell came in March 2025.
President Trump signed an executive order requiring every U.S. federal agency to integrate and share data across platforms: tax records, surveillance footage, immigration files, health reports, military logistics - all of it.
Guess who won the contract to unify that?
Palantir Foundry.
Suddenly, the United States wasn’t just a country. It became one searchable database.
And Wall Street took notice. Palantir stock exploded, outperforming the S&P 500, as investors realized what was happening: Palantir wasn’t just another software company. It was becoming the digital backbone of the modern state.
And they did it all without building a single iPhone app, launching a social network, or selling to the public. No controversy. No press conference.
Just quiet, relentless domination.
Palantir’s influence extends deep into public health infrastructure through its partnership with the CDC’s Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics (CFA). As part of the DCIPHER initiative, Foundry has been used by the CDC since the 2010s to consolidate and analyze data across food-borne illnesses, respiratory pathogens, and genomics, even before COVID.
Yet this union of public health and private surveillance has sparked widespread concern. In mid-2025 the CDC quietly rolled out plans to integrate Foundry across all disease reporting, from measles and polio to gender and reproductive care. State officials raised alarms that this sprawling data consolidation, while efficient, could expose sensitive health information and leave individuals vulnerable. Some patient advocates and labor groups even demanded legal constraints on how much health data can flow into a private company’s system.
The Ethics of a Surveillance Empire: How Much Is Too Much?
The world Palantir is building forces us to ask a hard question:
At what point does safety become control?
Palantir was born out of a noble goal - to stop terrorism. In the aftermath of 9/11, that mission made sense. The idea of connecting scattered data to find patterns and prevent attacks sounded not only logical, but necessary.
But like all powerful tools, it didn’t stop there.
What happens when the same software used to hunt terrorists gets used to track citizens, predict crimes, and monitor employees without consent?
The line between protection and violation becomes dangerously thin.
Take New Orleans in 2012. Palantir partnered with local police to flag "high-risk" individuals based on arrest records, gang affiliations, and social networks. These people were placed under surveillance, not because they committed a crime, but because an algorithm said they might.
They were never told.
There was no oversight.
Just a score, and a target on their back.
In another case, JPMorgan used Palantir to track its own employees, emails, web browsing history, badge swipes, even private phone calls. Executives were monitored without authorization. One employee described it as "being watched by a ghost."
If a company can monitor your every move, and the government can access that data in real time, where does privacy end? Is there even a boundary anymore?
Then there’s the issue of consent.
Palantir doesn’t operate like Apple or Google. There’s no user agreement, no terms and conditions you can read or reject. You’re not a user. You’re data.
If your hospital uses Foundry, your health records go into the system.
If your bank uses Foundry, your transactions are analyzed.
If your government uses Gotham, your phone logs, car license plates, and internet activity might already be part of a “risk model.”
You never signed up for it.
You just live in a society that did.
Palantir’s defenders argue: “If you’ve done nothing wrong, you have nothing to fear.”
But that’s a flawed argument.
Privacy isn’t about hiding wrongdoing. It’s about having the freedom to exist without constant scrutiny. It’s about knowing that your thoughts, your behavior, your life are your own.
A surveillance system doesn’t just track, it shapes.
If people know they’re being watched, they act differently.
They self-censor. They avoid certain topics. They conform.
This is the true power of Palantir, not just in what it sees, but in what it makes people do to avoid being seen.
And yet, we’re only scratching the surface.
Because the next frontier isn’t just watching the world.
It’s predicting it.
Predictive Policing, AI, and the Future of Total Awareness
Palantir’s most powerful - and most controversial - promise is this:
Not only can we tell you what happened, we can tell you what’s about to happen.
Welcome to the era of predictive policing.
Through Gotham, Palantir has enabled governments and law enforcement agencies to move beyond reaction and into prediction. By ingesting massive amounts of data - criminal records, financial transactions, social media connections, facial recognition feeds - it claims to identify people “at risk” of committing crimes before they even do.
It’s not science fiction. It’s already been deployed.
Remember the New Orleans project? Based on an individual's past behavior and who they interacted with, Palantir flagged them for potential future crimes. This “pre-crime” approach is eerily similar to the dystopian visions we saw in Minority Report. But this isn’t a movie - it’s real.
The ethical minefield is staggering.
Can you arrest someone for something they haven’t done yet?
Should someone's social circle determine whether they get extra police surveillance?
What if the algorithm is wrong?
Worse - what if the algorithm is biased?
AI systems reflect the data they’re trained on. If historical data is flawed or biased - say, over-policing certain communities - then the model will reinforce those patterns. Predictive policing could easily become predictive discrimination, cloaked in the illusion of objectivity.
This technology doesn’t just stay in police departments.
It’s bleeding into border security, national defense, and even hospitals.
Imagine an AI system flagging immigrants at risk of overstaying visas.
Imagine a hospital algorithm denying treatment because a patient is “low priority” based on predictive demand.
Imagine being denied a loan or job, not because of your record, but because a piece of software predicted you’d be a liability.
And it’s accelerating.
Palantir is doubling down on AI integration. Foundry now allows businesses to build and deploy their own AI models directly on top of their data, no need for developers or engineers. Just click, model, and predict.
In 2025, when Trump signed the executive order forcing all federal agencies to share data, it was the final puzzle piece.
Suddenly, Foundry had access to tax records, immigration files, health data, court transcripts, and more. In one dashboard, the entire machinery of American bureaucracy was unified and searchable.
The result? A government with omniscient-like visibility over its citizens.
Not just what they’ve done - but what they might do.
Some see this as efficiency. Others see it as totalitarianism dressed in sleek UX.
Either way, it’s here. And it’s not slowing down.
Wall Street sees this too.
Because while governments use Palantir to predict threats, hedge funds and corporations are using it to predict opportunity.
Trends, risk, human behavior - it’s all just data now.
And if you control the data, you control the future.
Why Wall Street Worships Palantir
The founder of Palantir is extremely well connected. Here’s how his life might appear in the company’s model.
Palantir isn’t just a surveillance company anymore - it’s a new kind of infrastructure. And Wall Street knows it.
When it first went public, analysts weren’t sure what to make of it. A company that spent 17 years losing money? Selling software the average person didn’t understand? Operating in the shadows of defense and intelligence?
But in 2025, the story changed.
Dramatically.
The executive order that forced federal agencies to share data unlocked something bigger than anyone expected. Suddenly, Palantir wasn’t just offering tools. It was providing the operating system for the entire U.S. government.
And in a world where data is the new oil - Palantir became the refinery, the pipeline, and the tanker all in one.
Investors saw what was coming.
The stock exploded, outpacing the S&P 500 and even many of the traditional tech giants.
But it’s not just government contracts fueling the growth.
The private sector is going all-in.
Hospitals use Foundry to predict ICU shortages.
Manufacturers use it to fix supply chains before they break.
Hedge funds use it to simulate market behavior and make trades with surgical precision.
This isn’t just software - it’s foresight as a service.
And unlike most tech products, Palantir is sticky. Once integrated, it’s nearly impossible to rip out. Why? Because it becomes the brain of your organization - the place where every decision starts.
That kind of control? Wall Street understands the value.
Think about it:
When your product is so deeply embedded in a system that the system cannot function without it - that’s not just software. That’s power.
So while the public debates the ethics, Wall Street is making bets.
Because Palantir doesn’t just sell predictions - it is, in itself, a bet on the future.
A future where everything is tracked.
Where nothing is private.
And where the winners are those who see what’s coming next - before everyone else.
How Palantir Has Infiltrated UK Government Organizations
Palantir’s quiet infiltration of UK government institutions has expanded rapidly in recent years. Palantir’s footprint in the UK government is no longer speculative - it’s active and expanding. From healthcare to justice to law enforcement, its technology is quietly becoming embedded across key public systems, often with minimal transparency or public oversight.
NHS & the £330M Federated Data Platform
In the UK, Palantir secured a £330 million contract to build and manage the NHS Federated Data Platform (FDP), intended to unify patient and operational data across up to 240 trusts. However, transparency advocates and medical professionals voiced deep concern. Internal emails obtained by OpenDemocracy revealed that the NHS data chief was invited to a private dinner hosted by Palantir’s lobbyists - raising serious questions about procurement ethics and conflict of interest. Moreover, spots in The Guardian and BMJ highlighted that many hospitals have refused to opt into the system, citing data privacy risks and distrust in outsourcing patient records to a US spy‑tech firm. Critics argue that while the NHS insists data will remain under NHS control, there's no technical or legal guarantee Palantir won’t gain access or influence operations behind the scenes
Predictive Justice: UK Prison Reoffending Risk Tools
Palantir has also quietly penetrated UK criminal justice. Documents published by The Guardian and Statewatch reveal that Palantir discussed predictive reoffending risk tools with the Ministry of Justice. Under these systems, over 1,300 reoffending risk assessments are reportedly made daily in England and Wales - automated by algorithm-based AI tools. Critics warn that flawed historical data results in biased predictions, turning parole or sentencing into outcomes guided by black-box models rather than human judgment. Activists call the approach a “garbage in, garbage out” nightmare, with no clear recourse for prisoners to challenge inaccurate scores
UK Police Transparency Failures
Despite claims of limited UK operations, investigations by Good Law Project and Liberty show widespread evasion in police transparency. Multiple forces - including Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, and regional units - have either denied or refused to confirm Palantir contracts under freedom-of-information requests, claiming national security exemptions. In one case, a police force removed contract details entirely from public records after being formally questioned. Campaigners fear this secrecy hides the extent of Palantir-powered surveillance across UK law enforcement
Are We Ready for a World That Predicts Us?
We live in a world where your digital footprints say more about you than your words ever could.
What you click, what you buy, where you drive, who you call, what you Google at 2AM - it’s all data. And to a company like Palantir, that data isn’t noise. It’s signal. It’s pattern. It’s prediction.
The terrifying part isn’t that the technology exists.
It’s that it’s already been deployed.
It’s hunting terrorists.
It’s managing pandemics.
It’s telling corporations who to hire and who to fire.
It’s even deciding who gets flagged before they commit a crime.
This is no longer science fiction.
This is your Tuesday morning.
And while most people scroll TikTok or binge Netflix, entire infrastructures are being built - quietly - to forecast your behavior before you even know what you’ll do next.
Ask yourself:
What happens when the system knows you better than you know yourself?
It knows when you’re likely to get sick.
When you’re about to quit your job.
When you might default on a loan.
When you could become a threat.
Now multiply that across 347 million Americans.
And plug it into a unified system run by the most powerful institutions on earth.
That’s not a dystopia.
That’s today.
So the question isn’t whether Palantir is watching.
It’s whether we’re paying attention.
Because you can’t opt out of a future that’s already here.
But you can understand it.
You can ask harder questions about where your data goes and who’s profiting from it.
You can stop assuming privacy is a default and start seeing it as a privilege.
And maybe - just maybe - you can build something of your own that doesn’t just track what’s happening, but helps shape it.
Because the world isn’t run by ideas anymore.
It’s run by infrastructure.
And the most dangerous thing about power is when it becomes invisible.
Now you know its name.
Palantir.
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RAISINI
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Palantir is evil. Thanks for posting this and explaining so thoroughly.
The South Africans love it. They say it’s the highest Trading Stocks in the world at the moment.