Saturday, March 14, 2026

Palantir is defending

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Palantir, directed for assembly Public control of work with the Trump administration adopted an increasingly defensive attitude towards journalists and perceived critics this week, both at a defense conference in Washington and in social media.

On Tuesday, Palantir’s employee threatened to call the journalist who watched the software demonstrations at the AI+ Expo stand. The conference, which is run by the Special Competitive Studies Project, Think Tank founded by the former General Director Google Eric Schmidt, is free and open to the audience, including journalists.

Later on the same day, Palantir conference security was removed by at least three other journalists-Jack Poulson, an All-Source intelligence subacction writer; Max Blimenthal, who writes and publishes Grayzone; And Jessica Le Masurier, a reporter in France 24 € “from the conference room, says Poulson. Poulson adds that reporters were able to re -introduce the room.

This movement occurred after Palantira spokesmen began to publicly condemn The last New York Times report The entitled “Trump touched Palantir to develop data on Americans” published on May 30. Wired had previously informed that the so -called Department of Government Empire (Doge) Elon Muska built a master database for research and tracking immigrants. Wired also informed that the company helped DOGE in the IRS data project, cooperating to build “Mega-Uap”

Public criticism of Palantir is unusual, because the company usually does not issue statements reversing individual messages.

Before digging from the Palantir Stand, a wired journalist, who is also the author of this article, took photos, videos and written notes during the Palantir Fedstart Partners software version, which use the company’s cloud systems to obtain a government work certificate. The walls of the stand had phrases such as “Recently Giant” and “Don” did not give up the ship! – printed out. When the reporter briefly left the stand and tried to climb again, Eliiano Younes, the head of the strategic commitment of Palantir, stopped her, who said Wired could not be there. The reporter asked why, and Younes repeated himself, adding that if Wired tried to come back, he would call the police.

After the conference, the Younes responded to a photo from the conference at which the reporter published X. “Hey Caroline, I see you well at the exhibition yesterday,” he wrote. “I can’t wait to read the report from this event.” Palantir did not answer Wired’s request for comment.

Poulson tells Wired that he, Blimenthal and Le Masurier also watched demos at Palantir’s stand before throwing away. After Tuesday’s panel with Younes and Palantir Engineer Ryan Fox, Poulson claims that Le Masurier approached the Younes stand near Palantir and asked about the company’s work on immigration and customs enforcement. Palantir’s employee passed between them and claimed that Palantir asked her to leave “modular times”, according to the film of the interaction viewed by Wired, and was soon escorted from the conference room.

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