Palantir IPO - The BIGGEST IPO EVER | Palantir Stock IPO | Palantir Stock Analysis
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 Published On Jul 28, 2020

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Palantir IPO - The BIGGEST IPO EVER | Palantir Stock IPO | Palantir Stock Analysis

Today we’re talking about what could potentially end up going down, as one of the best artificial intelligence stocks to buy in 2020. Palantir knows everything there is to know about you, yet you’ve probably never heard of them before. Which is no surprise, because they have a now infamous reputation for being one of the most secretive companies ever. But that is all about to change, as they have just filed confidential plans for their long-awaited IPO.

In this video we will dive deep into the both interesting and very mysterious world of Palantir. This is my stock analysis of what I think might end up being one of the best AI stocks to buy now.

Palantir Filed Confidential Plans For Long-Awaited IPO! Palantir knows everything about you. They help track terrorists, but do they overstep privacy boundaries? Should you buy Palantir stock? This video shows you the good, the bad, and the ugly. I provide information and my opinions, but the goal is to enable you to make your own decision.

Palantir has clauses in contracts that don’t allow them to talk much about their projects. Highly secretive! Very close relationship with US government and intelligence agencies, and the rumor is that Palantir helped track down Osama Bin Laden.

“We built Palantir starting in 2004 to supply the US intelligence community with a world class software platforms. We built one called PG which now powers a lot of the Western world, both inside the US and Europe...allows intelligence, defense and police officials to more accurately track data and the people that are interested in tracking in accordance of the law. Subsequently, we built platforms for special operators and in the data aggregation space.” ...they went from a niche player for the highly classified intelligence community to what you could call the platform upon in which data analytics are done inside and outside of the US in the course of the last 10 years.
“We went from being a small company to a company that powers most of the west and its key institutions, including homeland security.”

Alex Karp does believe in regulation and enforcement. He takes a much different view from Silicon Valley. He said “these are really serious consequential questions that will effect all of our lives in a very significant way now and in the future and have already have effected them in ways that people understand and don’t understand. Do we want a Motley Crew of people in Silicon Valley who build platforms deciding which institutions work and under what conditions....we at Palantir have a view...which is that in societies where there is a functioning democracy...meaning that there Check’s and balances enforced by a functioning judiciary, we have supplied the software and will continue to provide the software.” That is a radical position in Silicon Valley. They have always been unpopular from the start.

“The present and the future ability to control the rule of law and it’s application will be determined by our ability to harness and master artificial intelligence and machine learning. It’s a very very radical decision to say you won’t help the US on this” He was speaking about Googles Maven Project.
“We at Palantir believe that those decisions should be made by the Us legislature, by our representatives, and by our courts”....not Silicon Valley, which he calls a small island that has different ideas on how things should work compared to society as a whole. In a CNBC interview at Davos, he also said “the small island in Silicon Valley that would love to decide what you eat, how you eat, and monetize all your data should not also decide who lives under a country and under which conditions”...I think it’s safe to say there isn’t much love on either side. In fact, Karp has worked out of a barn in New Hampshire for the past 15 years.

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