Daily Mail

Software boss takes aim at Silicon Valley in £15bn float

- by Matt Oliver

THE origins of Silicon Valley – long before Facebook, Google and Apple – are inextricab­ly linked with America’s defence establishm­ent.

It was Pentagon funding that helped to develop the internet, while Fairchild Semiconduc­tor – now seen as the original Valley start-up – began by making chips for Cold War missiles and the rockets that put Neil Armstrong on the moon.

But while this historic link with government has become unfashiona­ble at some tech firms lately, one company is putting it at the heart of its pitch to investors.

Palantir, a data analytics business preparing to float on the New York Stock Exchange, claims to be different to the ‘engineerin­g elite of Silicon Valley’.

Co-founded by investors that include Paypal tycoon Peter Thiel, it has ‘chosen sides’ and will stand by clients, who include the US and UK government­s, no matter what. Put simply, it makes software that helps to crunch huge amounts of data and then present it in a way that makes it easier for experts to analyse.

Its computer algorithms detect fraudulent credit card payments, help police connect the dots between suspects and track down roadside bomb makers who target American troops in Afghanista­n.

It was recently drafted in by the NHS to analyse data on the spread of the coronaviru­s.

And it is said to have helped US authoritie­s find Al- Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden before his killing.

But the company’s sensitive and sometimes controvers­ial work means it has long been steeped in secrecy – until now.

This week Palantir partially lifted the veil ahead of its £15bn stock market listing, expected to be one of the biggest recent floats after those of Uber, Lyft, Spotify and Slack.

It hopes to tap into the global tech boom, which has seen digital companies flourish even during the coronaviru­s crisis, with other deals including British software giant Aveva’s takeover of Osisoft and the £23bn float of Chinese Palantir’s giant prospectus Ant Financial. reveals familiar Silicon Valley features: an eccentric chief executive; the view that tech can solve life’s most intractabl­e problems; and a sky-high valuation - despite a lack of profit.

Indeed, after 16 years in operation, it has never been in the black.

It brought in revenues of £565m last year, with 35pc coming from the US and 20pc from the UK, but still lost £441m. Yet the company, led by boss and co-founder Alex Karp, is betting that the explosion in data being collected means its services are needed more than ever. It has taken aim at companies like Facebook, which collect vast amounts of user data to sell targeted advertisin­g. ‘We seem to share fewer and fewer of the sector’s values and commitment­s,’ Karp said. ‘Software projects with our defence and intelligen­ce agencies, whose missions are to keep us safe, have become controvers­ial, while companies built on advertisin­g dollars are commonplac­e. ‘Our software is used to target terrorists and to keep soldiers safe. We have chosen sides, and we know our partners value our commitment. We stand by them when it is convenient, and when it is not.’ Yet working with government agencies has also led to controvers­ies. The data it has pulled together at some organisati­ons, from banks to police department­s, is so comprehens­ive that it has been abused by the staff of some customers to snoop on people such as former romantic partners. In New Orleans, its algorithms to hunt criminals were shut down after accusation­s of bias and racism. And its work with the US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t was divisive among its own staff, after the agency was scrutinise­d for separating immigrant families at the border.

Despite a petition from employees, however, Karp said it would continue working with the US government.

The 52-year-old is a philosophy graduate who reportedly enjoys solving Rubik’s cubes and keeps 20 identical pairs of swimming goggles in his office. He previously branded Google ‘treasonous’ for its decision to stop working with the US military on an artificial intelligen­ce project.

‘Silicon Valley is telling the average American “I will not support your defence needs” while selling products to countries that are adversaria­l to America. That is a loser position,’ Karp told CNBC. Thiel, a staunch ally of President Donald Trump, also branded Google’s decision ‘shocking’.

Palantir admits that its own decision to avoid working with China could also hamper its success. But it still thinks the market for its software is huge – with £90bn per year up for grabs.

Palantir believes that approach will prove to be the right one. ‘The engineerin­g elite of Silicon Valley may know more than most about building software,’ Karp said. ‘But they do not know more about how society should be organised or what justice requires.’

 ??  ?? Trump card: Peter Thiel
Trump card: Peter Thiel

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