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Imperceptible Relics's avatar

A lot of those databases/paper records are left separate by design. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/s-just-insanity-atf-now-needs-2-weeks-perform-routine-gun-trace-rcna39606 Not saying I agree with every record that isn't connected, but some of that is the definition of privacy.

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Emily Murnane's avatar

Enjoyed reading your perspective on this Danny!

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Danny Crichton's avatar

Thanks Emily!

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Jon Rowlands's avatar

Palantir's business model is to work around government privacy rules by combining fragmented data beyond the reach of government internal protections, and selling it back to governments. The reason Donald Trump's tax returns aren't public is that the IRS protected them, because of privacy regulations, despite other parts of the government calling for them. It's simply not credible that Palantir will similarly respect your privacy. Corruption is not improved by efficiency.

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The Society of Problem Solvers's avatar

What?

It’s worse.

Palantir founder Peter Thiel gave $40 million to Epstein. The whole thing is a corrupted apparatus that is going to be used against people. Palantir is targeting system for war.

The evidence this time is right to Epstein. We must drop our made up labels (they use our labels to manipulate us) and unify as one people against our biggest problem, corrupted systems, by building new ones that are hard to corrupt (transparent and decentralized), 100% controlled by the people, and that use collective intelligence systems to steer them. The easiest way we can fix this mess is by building parallel systems, migrate to them, then use them to fix the corrupted ones. Like so: https://open.substack.com/pub/joshketry/p/how-to-fix-corrupt-government-in?r=7oa9d&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

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