Palantir exece defends the company’s immigration monitoring work

One of the founders of Y Combinator, a startup accelerator, provided criticism of Palantir, a controversial data analysis company this weekend, led the company to provide a wide range of defense against Palantir’s work.

After the federal submission, the US immigration and tariff execution (ICE), which was in charge of the aggressive deportation strategy of immigration, showed that the immigrant life cycle operating system or immigrant paid $ 30 million to Palantir to make an immigration life cycle operating system or immigration to help them determine those who target themselves.

Y Combinator founder Paul Graham shared a headline for Palantir’s contract for X: “It’s a very interesting time in the current technology. There are many other places where you can work instead of building the infrastructure of the police department.”

In response to this, Palantir’s commercial TED Mabrey’s global manager wrote, “We are looking forward to hiring sets after reading the post and applying to Palantir.”

Mabrey did not discuss the details of Palantir’s current ICE work, but the company said, “We have begun to cooperate with ICE.

Mabrey said, “When people are alive because of what you have built and others are not enough to build, you develop a very different perspective on the meaning of your work.

He also had to compare the criticism of Graham in 2018 with the protests against Google’s project Maven, and eventually had to stop the military’s drone image analysis. (Google signaled it as more open to defense again.)

Mabrey urged Palantir to be interested in reading the new book, “The Technological Republic,” by CEO Alexander KARP, which claims that the software industry should rebuild its relationship with the government. (The company is recruiting college campuses as a sign that “the moment of calculation has arrived in the West.)

Mabrey said, “We hire believers. 1) Our work is very difficult and 2) You must always expect such weather attacks.

Graham urged Mabrey to “openly commit the government to not build things that help violate the US Constitution on behalf of Palantir,” but in other posts, such promises would be “legal power.”

“But I will say that if some Palantir employees are requested to be illegal one day, I will not join this.”

Mabrey compared Graham’s questions to “promise to stop hitting my wife,” but he added, “I’ve made this promise in many ways from Sunday.”