Goodday,

The WIRED piece, if you have xs, you can read here:

https://www.wired.com/story/palantir-employees-are-starting-to-wonder-if-theyre-the-bad-guys/

From FB (fwded):

https://www.facebook.com/beingliberal.org/posts/pfbid05SQWpBbQWqHDSeL8jTpLMtzSfP7CB8xzvvseVXipeKPA3Ejjb5Jhrev2ZxJnSc9Dl

In 𝙒𝙞𝙧𝙚𝙙, I'm reading a piece about employees at 𝗣𝗮𝗹𝗮𝗻𝘁𝗶𝗿 — a company that 
recently published, and there's no other way to put it, a technofascist 
manifesto. Workers are waking up to who they're actually working for, and 
beginning to grasp that their values have nothing in common with technofascism.
𝘞𝘪𝘳𝘦𝘥 describes how they're exchanging careful but plainly worded doubts about 
the direction of a company run by Alexander Karp and co-founded by Peter Thiel 
— two men who fit the exaggerated, previously-only-fictional Bond-villain 
archetype of the obscenely rich megalomaniac whose deranged ambitions could end 
civilization.
For more than two decades, those doubts were largely absent. Until now — when 
Palantir's tools being used by Trump's human-rights-violating agencies, and 
deployed in strikes on Iran that killed children, finally started generating 
pushback. Better late than never, I suppose.
The entanglement of tech companies with authoritarian power isn't new. You can 
visit the Gross-Rosen concentration camp — far less known than Auschwitz — and 
see the barracks where prisoners performed forced labor manufacturing 
components for companies including Siemens.
Working in tech is no longer just about good pay and the social status that 
lets you — especially in developing or aspirational economies — claim 
membership in the middle class. Working in tech is now a moral question. As I 
said in my last episode: Big Tech's ties to the military are stronger than 
they've ever been, and the entire sector is militarizing. And with it, more and 
more aspects of the world we live in.
A few years ago, landing a job with a Silicon Valley giant was something people 
admired — or at minimum, envied. But today, being employed by companies that 
supply tools like Palantir's, that enable technofascism, that work against 
freedom — that is increasingly a declaration of allegiance. There's no room 
left for "we had no idea." Those days are over. — @Gosia Fraser
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