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Home » Read Palantir’s 9-Point Manifesto on ‘AI Sovereignty’
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Read Palantir’s 9-Point Manifesto on ‘AI Sovereignty’

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIAJuly 1, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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Palantir is back with another manifesto that makes its AI values crystal clear.

On Tuesday, the company posted a 9-point post on X about the importance of “AI sovereignty.” The post urged companies to keep their data in-house, rather than outsourcing to institutions that Palantir paints as untrustworthy.

The post also decries “tokenmaxxing,” the practice of spending as much as possible on AI. Palantir wrote that this spending had the “addictive feeling of false progress.”

Alex Karp has long been critical of the frontier AI labs. Earlier in June, he said on CNBC that the AI companies “don’t understand how unlikeable they are.” Karp said their products “don’t actually work the way” customers expect.

Palantir’s 9-point post:

1. Your AI sovereignty dictates your institution’s future. Sovereignty is the precondition for choice. Relinquishing sovereignty transfers the future choices of your institution to others, who are likely to exploit it for their gain and your loss.

2. Data retention is your treasure. Transfer it at your own peril. Your ability to win is dictated by your ability to recognize and use your unique edges, and you keep winning by compounding the underlying data to generate new insights. Transferring that data hands over access to your pre-existing winning plays and yields the means of production for new ones.

3. Tokenmaxxing hijacks your value orientation and decreases your institutional fortitude and intelligence. The pursuit of high token usage incentivizes disposable scripts over robust software — with the addictive feeling of false progress. There is a reason why those selling tokens refuse to charge based on value.

4. Controlling your weights is controlling your fate. Weights are the distilled form of hard-won, accumulated institutional knowledge. If you let others control your weights, you are allowing them to migrate the alpha of your business to theirs.

5. There is no contradiction between sovereignty and alpha. The architecture that maximally preserves sovereignty is one that enables institutions to own their tribal knowledge, and to compound it as alpha.

6. Politicizing the technical issues involving sovereignty is what your adversary wants. Techno-politicization is the wellspring of false sovereignty. Techno-politicization drives decisions that seem to reduce dependency, but ultimately limit agency — especially on the battlefield in the West.

7. Real expertise is existential. Allowing politics or favoritism to determine your technical decisions rewards whoever is best at politics, not whoever is right. Listen to those closest to the problems, not those speaking most compellingly about them.

8. Learn from institutions that are winning or that have consistently delivered. Institutions facing existential threats do not have the luxury of making technical decisions based on political preferences.

9. Only listen to institutions, countries, and people who have a proven record of being right. A track record of correctness is the best and only signal for future correctness. Judging something as right or wrong based on who you like is exceedingly misguided.



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