‘An excellent look at what Palantir does, as well as a
fascinating insight into the mind of its eccentric chief executive’ Telegraph
Palantir Technologies is the most interesting company in
the world – and the most controversial.
Palantir builds data integration software: its technology
ingests vast quantities of information and quickly identifies patterns, trends
and connections that might elude the human eye. Founded in 2003 to help the
U.S. government in the war on terrorism – an early investor was the CIA –
Palantir is now a $400 billion global colossus whose software is used by major
intelligence services (including the Mossad), the U.S. military, the National
Health Service in England, and corporate giants like Airbus and BP. From AI to
counterterrorism to climate change to immigration to financial fraud to
healthcare to the future of warfare, the company is at the nexus of the most
critical issues of the twenty-first century.
Its billionaire CEO, Alex Karp, is a distinctive figure on
the global business scene. A biracial Jew who is also severely dyslexic, Karp
has built Palantir into a tech giant despite having no background in either
business or computer science. Instead, he’s a trained philosopher who has
become known for his strongly held views on a range of issues and for his
willingness to grapple with the moral and ethical implications of Palantir’s
work. Those questions have taken on added urgency during the Trump era, which
has also brought attention to the political activism of Karp’s close friend and
Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel.
In The Philosopher in the Valley, journalist
Michael Steinberger is the first to tell the story of Alex Karp and Palantir
from the beginning. Steinberger offers new biographical details and a rich
psychological portrait of the man leading one of the world’s most secretive
companies. Full of revelations, this is an urgent and insightful book about
technological power, the surveillance state and the future we all face.
About the Author
Michael Steinberger is a longtime journalist who writes
primarily for The New York Times Magazine.
He has written cover stories for the magazine about Joe
Biden, George Soros, and Roger Federer. Before becoming a journalist,
Steinberger spent several years working on Wall Street.
He is the author of Au Revoir to All That: Food, Wine, and
the End of France and The Wine Savant: A Guide to the New Wine Culture. Follow
him on X at @WineDiarist.