• resipsaloquitur@lemmy.cafe
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      6 days ago

      Less of a descent. More of an ascent mimicking a conspicuously stiff-armed wave.

      Und And we will put rockets HERE, and THERE and one full of (the good kind of) Afrikkkaners HERE!

  • Maeve@kbin.earth
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    6 days ago

    Then came the deadly February 28 missile strike on an Iranian elementary school on the first full day of the Trump administration and Israel’s war in Iran. The US is the only known country in the conflict to use that specific type of missile. More than 120 children were killed when a Tomahawk missile struck the school, kicking off a series of investigations that concluded that the US was responsible and that surveillance tools like Palantir’s Maven system had been used during that day’s strikes. For a company full of employees already reeling over its work with ICE, possible involvement in the death of children was a breaking point.

    “I guess the root of what I’m asking is … were we involved, and are doing anything to stop a repeat if we were,” one employee asked in the Palantir news Slack channel. Some employees posed similar questions in the thread, while others criticized them for discussing what could be considered classified information in a Slack channel open to the entire company. The investigation is ongoing.

    The Palantir spokesperson said the company was “proud” to support the US military “across Democratic and Republican administrations.”

    In March, Karp gave an interview to CNBC claiming that AI could undermine the power of “humanities-trained—largely Democratic—voters” and increase the power of working-class male voters. While critics reacted to the piece, calling the statements concerning, so did employees internally: “Is it true that AI disruption is going to disproportionately negatively affect women and people who vote Democrat? and if it is, why are we cool with that?” one worker asked on Slack in a channel dedicated to news about Palantir.

    • Optional@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      The Palantir spokesperson said the company was “proud” to support the US military “across Democratic and Republican administrations.”

      Point of order, Public Relations for most evil corps are soulless automatons whose words mean less than nothing.

  • DandomRude@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I think it would certainly be appropriate to socially isolate all these people so that they might finally realize what atrocities they are committing, since they themselves don’t seem to realize what crimes they are complicit in.

    Even the murder of 120 children still doesn’t seem terrible enough for these monsters to see the light.

    They are terrible people, and that is why they deserve nothing but contempt, for they have more than earned it.

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    About 9 years ago, I was on unemployment. To keep my benefits I needed to apply to X companies per week. It didn’t matter if any of those applications led to interviews or not. If every application was successful, the number of interviews that resulted was exhausting. As a result, I applied to some jobs on purpose that I knew would reject me just to keep the number of interviews manageable.

    One job I applied for that I knew would reject me was Palantir. They definitely wanted someone with my skills, so I had to make it clear that I was a bad fit with my cover letter. I made a cover letter that matched the things they claimed to believe in their mission statement, etc. But, I did it while talking about how personal privacy was critical, how openness and transparency was important for a functioning society, etc. Despite my perfect match of skills to the job description, they didn’t even follow up.

    All that to say, even 9 years ago it was absolutely obvious what kind of company Palantir was, and anybody who works there now either had no morals, or knew that they were being paid to put those morals to the side in exchange for an enormous pay package.