Yesterday
Russell Norman asked questions in parliament about the involvement of an
American company called Palantir in mining information about New
Zealanders.
Here
is an article about Palanir's role in PRISM.
Is
data mining company Palantir's software behind PRISM surveillance?
Palantir says no
9
June, 2013
Earlier
today, Talking Points Memo surfaced a new theory about the NSA and
FBI's PRISM surveillance program: that it originated with data mining
software company Palantir. "Palantir has a software package
called 'Prism': 'Prism is a software component that lets you quickly
integrate external databases into Palantir,'" wrote an anonymous
source. "That sounds like exactly the tool you'd want if you
were trying to find patterns in data from multiple companies."
Palantir,
which offers its services to a variety of industries, is well-known
for its national security work. Likely coincidentally, it even once
proposed a smear campaign against journalist Glenn Greenwald, who
released information about both PRISM and a court order requiring
Verizon to turn over call logs. But the company insists its Prism
program has nothing to do with surveillance.
"Palantir's
Prism platform is completely unrelated to any US government program
of the same name," the company told us. "Prism is
Palantir's name for a data integration technology used in the
Palantir Metropolis platform (formerly branded as Palantir Finance).
This software has been licensed to banks and hedge funds for
quantitative analysis and research." Palantir's overview of the
program describes it as a way to integrate databases into its
software.
"THIS
SOFTWARE HAS BEEN LICENSED TO BANKS AND HEDGE FUNDS FOR QUANTITATIVE
ANALYSIS AND RESEARCH."
So
far, none of the companies named in the PRISM leak has given us a
statement either admitting or denying Palantir's involvement. Yahoo
and AOL referred us to previous statements about PRISM, reiterating
that they do not provide government agencies with access to their
servers. As Talking Points Memo's source points out, of course, that
technically means they could be granting access to a third party like
Palantir. Likewise, Palantir isn't explicitly ruling out involvement
with the NSA (which has been openly identified previously as a
client) — but it is saying that the Prism program isn't part of any
surveillance effort.
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