Palantir files for IPO with manifesto against Silicon Valley surveillance
Mandatory Credit: Photo by PETER KLAUNZER/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock (9332949as) Alex Karp World Economic Forum 2018 in Davos, Switzerland - 24 Jan 2018 Alex Karp, CEO Palantir, looks on during a panel session about 'Digital Switzerland', on the second day of the 48th Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, 24January 2018. The meeting brings together entrepreneurs, scientists, corporate and political leaders in Davos, January 23 to 26. ** Usable by LA, CT and MoD ONLY **
The idea that Palantir has been unfairly targeted for criticism repeats throughout its IPO filing. Above, Alex Karp, chief executive of Palantir, is shown in 2018. (PETER KLAUNZER /EPA/Shutterstock)

In a regulatory filing setting the stage for its initial public offering of stock, the Palo Alto-based data analytics company Palantir offered a glimpse at its finances — and a manifesto against Silicon Valley tech companies.

Much of the filing covered expected ground. Palantir, which counts the Los Angeles Police Department and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement among its clients, disclosed that it has been losing roughly $580 million a year for the last two years, and used the filing to make the case for why investors should ignore the red ink and buy its stock once the company goes public.

But in the section where many companies would put a few paragraphs of sunny verbiage about how their products are changing lives and (eventually) making money, Palantir drew a line in the sand.

"Our company was founded in Silicon Valley," Chief Executive Alex Karp wrote. "But we seem to share fewer and fewer of the technology sector’s values and commitments."

Karp outlined the company's self-image as a lone, steely-eyed pragmatist among its ineffectual peers in Silicon Valley, echoing past public statements from company co-founder and largest shareholder Peter Thiel, who served on the Trump administration's transition team and has called Google's work with China "potentially treasonous."

The letter begins by discussing the company's business culture and two core products.

The first software platform, Gotham, is used by defense, intelligence, and law enforcement agencies to model and manage reams of data. The LAPD has used the platform to track people through the city using surveillance footage and generate lists of "chronic offenders" as part of its predictive policing program, which was discontinued following concerns that it unfairly targeted Black and Latino communities. Palantir, which was founded with money from the Central Intelligence Agency, counts a number of Department of Defense and federal intelligence agencies among its clients as well, and Karp said in January that ICE has used Palantir's Gotham software for years to track down undocumented immigrants.

The company's second product, Foundry, is pitched at businesses as a way to manage their own internal data. In both cases, Karp argues that Palantir products are superior to other data management software on the market.

But Karp then moves beyond the standard pitch to investors. Making software to supercharge state surveillance and assist soldiers on military missions raises serious ethical issues, Karp writes, and engineers at other Silicon Valley firms are not equipped to confront them.