Purge Palantir

Join a growing global coalition to stop Palantir's surveillance on our communities.

Two women holding signs at a protest. One reads:

Photo by Dov Baum

Palantir, a US tech giant, openly supports Israel's genocidal attacks on Gaza. In the US, the company helps immigration authorities target people for deportation and police departments to surveil our communities. Palantir does this primarily with its specialized artificial intelligence (AI) tools and centralizing data, often including everyday people's personal data, all into one place.

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  • In June 2025, the British Medical Association, the labor union representing nearly 200,000 medical professionals in the UK, passed a resolution condemning Palantir's involvement in managing the country's medical data.
  • In May 2025, University of San Francisco announced plans to divest from Palantir, GE Aerospace, L3Harris, and RTX, as part of overhauling its investment portfolio in response to student demands. These four companies have been specifically targeted by student activists because of the university's direct investment in them, which amounted to 0.5% of its total $566 million endowment.
  • In October 2024, Storebrand Asset Management sold its entire stake in Palantir due the company's work in Israel. The asset manager is one of the largest in the Nordic region and held approximately $24 million in Palantir before divesting.
  • In September 2024, University of Michigan Graduate Employees’ Organization overwhelmingly (90%) approved a new investment policy statement, divesting from military contractors, prisons, and Israeli apartheid and genocide. The policy is implemented by switching the Union's existing funds, which include Palantir, Caterpillar, Motorola Solutions, and multiple other companies on the divestment shortlist, to funds that exclude these companies.
  • In July 2024, the Presbyterian Church (USA) voted to "begin focused engagement" with Palantir Technologies and General Electric, with possible divestment recommendations if the engagement does not move these companies into compliance with the Church's policies.
  • In May 2024, after a 2-week student encampment, San Francisco State University, California announced it would add “a human rights-based investment strategy, including divesting from direct investments in weapons manufacturers and limiting other such indirect investments.” The University also committed to improve its public disclosure of its investments. By the end of the summer, SFSU had sold shares it held in Palantir, Caterpillar, Lockheed Martin, and Leonardo.
  • In March 2021, Soros Fund Management revealed that it had sold its entire stake in Palantir, at the time worth approximately $500 million. In November 2020, the Fund had announced plans to divest from Palantir because the Fund "does not agree with Palantir's business practices."
  • In September 2019, over 1,200 students from 17 U.S. universities signed a pledge that they would not work with Palantir because of its relationship with ICE.
  • On August 28, 2019, the largest conference for women in computing, the Grace Hopper Celebration, dropped Palantir as a sponsor after a petition with 200 signatures was submitted citing its relationship with ICE.
  • In August 2019, 60 Palantir employees signed a petition calling for an end to its contracts and relationship with ICE, including its role in family separations.
  • In August 2019, the LGBTQ tech organization, Lesbians Who Tech, removed Palantir from its annual job fair because of public dissent to Palantir’s role in ICE workplace raids.
  • In June 2019, the Privacy Law Scholars Conference at the University of California at Berkeley dropped Palantir as a sponsor after 140 academics signed a letter citing its questionable relationship with ICE.