Palantir Has Been Dumped By Another Blue-Chip Client

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Palantir Technologies, the secretive Silicon Valley data analysis firm co-founded by Peter Thiel, has lost a marquee cybersecurity client, BuzzFeed News has learned, continuing a string of defections by corporate customers.

Home Depot, which hired Palantir after its major credit card hack in 2014, ended the relationship in December over concerns that Palantir’s services weren’t worth the price, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The retailer concluded that it could accomplish much of the same work on its own, one of the people said.

In addition, Home Depot was rankled when Palantir staff sought to drum up additional business in other parts of the company, on time paid for by the cybersecurity department, one of the people said.

The cancellation means one of the world’s largest retailers has joined a list of blue-chip companies that have stopped doing business with Palantir since 2015. Others, including Coca-Cola, American Express, and Nasdaq, also balked at Palantir’s price tag, BuzzFeed News reported last year, or raised doubts about its usefulness. Home Depot’s exit also illustrates how a metric called “bookings,” which Palantir uses to measure deal size — and which it has given out publicly when describing the size of its overall business — can fail to translate into actual revenue.

At the time it was signed, the Home Depot contract was considered Palantir’s biggest ever cybersecurity deal, and Palantir executives immediately started citing it in pitch conversations with potential new customers, according to internal emails reviewed by BuzzFeed News. Now, Palantir will end up collecting significantly less than the booking value it promoted internally, according to the emails and the people familiar with the matter.

If you have information or tips, you can contact this reporter over an encrypted chat service such as Signal or WhatsApp, at 310-617-1302. You can also send an encrypted email to will.alden@buzzfeed.com, using the PGP key found here.

Home Depot paid Palantir about $5 million a year, excluding cloud storage costs, during the two years of the relationship, according to someone with direct knowledge of the matter. But Palantir’s internal calculus appeared to reflect an expectation that the price would rise over time — and that the deal would last longer.

In one internal email from December 2014, when contract talks were held, Melody Hildebrandt, a senior Palantir executive, said the two sides had reached a five-and-a-half-year agreement, worth a total of $37.5 million in bookings. Later, in a January 2015 memo to staff, the total deal size was cited as $60 million. (Both emails described the deal as Palantir’s largest ever in cybersecurity.)

A Home Depot spokesperson told BuzzFeed News, “We aren’t going to publicly discuss our cybersecurity operations.” A Palantir spokesperson declined to comment.

Chaired by Thiel, the billionaire venture capitalist who is now advising President Donald Trump, Palantir works for government agencies and major corporations, making highly customized software to analyze and visualize data. Its work, by Silicon Valley standards, is labor-intensive, with teams of “forward deployed engineers” working onsite at client offices.

But Palantir, which started in 2004 and took early capital from the CIA, has generated considerable mystique in Washington and in corporate board rooms. It has garnered a $20 billion valuation, making it among the largest “unicorn” startups in Silicon Valley, and its CEO hinted last fall that it could soon pursue an IPO.

Though Palantir is not primarily a cybersecurity company, it has made cybersecurity an important part of its business development strategy. With a number of corporate customers, Palantir got its initial foothold through cybersecurity services, aiming to eventually add new data-crunching work to the customer’s tab.

Palantir even has a job category called “leverage,” which includes pushing customers to sign up for more of its services, according to former employees. As one former employee put it, “They try to find a specific problem the customer is trying to solve, and use that as a fishing expedition to leverage that into a bigger scope of work.”

At Home Depot — which once had the codename “Sherlock” inside Palantir — cybersecurity was supposed to be just the first service among many.

“The door is open for additional use case talks after we crush Q2 in cyber,” a Palantir business development engineer, Sam Jones, told colleagues in an April 2015 email.

The Pinehurst golf resort in North Carolina, where Palantir and Home Depot staffers mingled during a charity event.

David Cannon / Getty Images

Palantir’s relationship with Home Depot was forged during a crisis. With the retailer reeling in 2014 from one of the largest cyber attacks ever unleashed on a U.S. corporation, Palantir quickly delivered its expert analysis, calculating, for example, the scope of the attack — that 56 million credit or debit card accounts had been compromised. By early 2015, once the initial work had evolved into an annual contract, Palantir engineers were pursuing three different strategies to investigate abnormal activity on the Home Depot network, with detailed findings, a slide deck shows.

Around that time, Daniel Grider, Home Depot’s vice president of information technology, described the Silicon Valley data wranglers as “awesome,” according to a Palantir email. When Jamil Farshchi, Home Depot’s newly hired chief information security officer, raised questions about Palantir’s price, “Grider told him not to worry about that much and just let us do our thing,” Palantir’s Jones told colleagues in 2015.

By 2016, however, Home Depot had taken a dimmer view of Palantir’s services. When the company first threatened to cancel, Palantir offered to lower its price, a person familiar with the matter said. But by then the retailer had determined it could rely on its own employees for the work Palantir engineers were doing.

Palantir had kept close tabs on Home Depot, even discussing juicy tidbits about its leadership. Before Farshchi was hired, Palantir employees discussed Home Depot’s search for a chief information security officer and even cited the salary level of the position. (The source of this information, according to one internal email, was a Palantir employee’s significant other, who worked for a headhunting firm.)

At a Home Depot charity event in April 2015, “it became even more clear the level of respect the entire IT department has for Palantir and that we are also in the ‘inner circle,&;” Jones told colleagues soon after. Over several days, Palantir employees joined Home Depot brass in building homes for military veterans, partying until the wee hours, and golfing at the Pinehurst resort in North Carolina.

The Palantir employees learned, via a presentation from a Home Depot executive, about the IT department’s goals for 2015 — useful information as Palantir sought to expand its role. They also accomplished some important schmoozing, Jones said: “We ticked some middle management off a few weeks ago escalating requests, and after drinking with a few of them we were invited to Austin to go hunting.”

Over drinks and cigars, the Palantir employees joined Home Depot executives for hold ‘em poker one night at a nearby condo. (They had to decamp to the condo because “North Carolina has some law about gambling and drinking in the same establishment,” Jones said.) Matt Carey, Home Depot’s executive vice president and chief information officer, was knocked out of the poker tournament three times by a Palantir employee, according to Jones.

“Matt joked with everyone else at our table how smart we were and that we were going to take everyone’s money,” Jones said.

If you have information or tips, you can contact this reporter over an encrypted chat service such as Signal or WhatsApp, at 310-617-1302. You can also send an encrypted email to will.alden@buzzfeed.com, using the PGP key found here.

Quelle: <a href="Palantir Has Been Dumped By Another Blue-Chip Client“>BuzzFeed

Which Messaging App Should You Use?

WHY ARE THERE SO MANY?!

There are so many ways to send a message these days. Google Voice recently added texts, group messaging, and transcribed voicemail after not updating their app for *five years,* bringing the number of Google&;s messaging apps to four (including Hangouts, Allo, and Duo). Facebook&039;s got two apps (WhatsApp and Messenger). Microsoft&039;s got two apps (GroupMe and Skype). Apple also kind of has two apps (iMessage and FaceTime).

That doesn&039;t include all of the other, independent messaging apps out there like Viber, WeChat, LINE, Telegram, and Kakaotalk, to name a few.

It&039;s true. We live in a time of TOO MANY messaging apps. So if you&039;re feeling lost in this ~brave new world~ of online communication, here&039;s a guide to the best platforms.

Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

The ~*ultimate*~ cross-platform messaging app is WhatsApp.

The ~*ultimate*~ cross-platform messaging app is WhatsApp.

WhatsApp (free, iOS, Android, Windows phone and web) is the Ultimate Messaging App. It has a giant user base, is super fast, works on many different devices (even Blackberry&;), has an easy-to-understand interface, and provides end-to-end encryption.

Plus, the Facebook-owned app has over one billion users on its platform, so it&039;s likely that some of your friends already using it.

WhatsApp offers free text messaging, group messaging, voice, and video calls over cellular data or Wi-Fi. It has a simple, easy-to-understand interface, without the overwhelming bells and whistles of the Viber and Line apps. The app is also fast. Multimedia (like photos, videos, audio messages and files up to 100MB) are compressed automatically by the app, so they send quickly even when connection is poor.

One of my favorite features is the ability to “star” messages with important reference information and access all of those starred messages in one, convenient place.

You can send and receive WhatsApp text messages from your mobile phone or the web. There is, unfortunately, no native desktop app and you can&039;t voice or video call from the web.

The app is encrypted end-to-end by default, but it can record metadata like the date, timestamp, and phone numbers associated with a message, according to a recently revised privacy policy. The app also announced last year that it was going to start sharing user information with Facebook, though it did let users opt out before agreeing to the updated terms of service. If you didn&039;t opt out before updating, you got an additional 30 days to make your choice.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed News

If you – and most of your contacts – have iPhones, it’s a no brainer: use iMessage.

If you – and most of your contacts – have iPhones, it's a no brainer: use iMessage.

For iPhone users, iMessage ticks all the boxes.

You don&039;t have to sign up for anything. It&039;s the default messaging app on all iPhones, unlike on some Android devices, where there can be up to four messaging apps to choose from (Hangouts? Allo? Duo? The cell carrier&039;s own messaging app?).

It works seamlessly with FaceTime video and audio calling over data or a cell connection. It&039;s encrypted end-to-end (although, only when you message other iPhone users). It works on your phone, it works on your Mac, and it works on your iPad. It lets you send lasers to your friends. It automatically sends texts via iMessage when it&039;s appropriate, and regular SMS to those outside the “blue bubble.” It can handle all kinds of media: GIFs, contacts, location, links, photos, videos, and voice memos.

You can use Siri to check messages or send new messages, and install integrations from the new iMessage app store. You can also access Yelp, Venmo, and Dropbox without ever leaving the Messages app.

Sure, there&039;s still room for improvement. Namely, lack of compatibility with ANY OTHER PLATFORMS (ugh). Apple can also collect some metadata, like the numbers you enter into iMessage, which are sent to Apple servers to determine whether or not the message should be sent through iMessage or SMS. Apple retains that data for up to 30 days, and can be compelled to hand it over to law enforcement with a subpoena or court order.

If iMessage were cross-platform, it might be the Perfect Messaging App. But until then, it&039;s the best option for those with iPhones to communicate with other peeps with iPhones.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed News

If you prefer features over security, plus texting, audio, *and* video chat, here are some options.

If you prefer features over security, plus texting, audio, *and* video chat, here are some options.

In addition to WhatsApp (read above), Facebook Messenger and Hangouts are some other apps to consider.

Facebook Messenger is more feature-rich, but doesn&039;t have as many privacy and security settings.

The messaging app by WhatsApp&039;s parent company, Facebook Messenger (free, iOS, Android, the web), has some pretty killer features, like being able to use high-definition video and audio calling on mobile or web. Messenger is unique because you can send money directly through the app in the US. There are also bots built into Messenger that can help you diagnose that weird rash or shop for you. One thing to note: users know when you&039;ve read their messages (and vice versa) and there&039;s no straightforward way to disable read receipts, sadly.

The app recently rolled out a new, fully encrypted feature called “Secret Conversations,” which ensures that the message&039;s content can&039;t be read by law enforcement or the company itself. The reason why Messenger is only for the ~moderately paranoid~ is because the encryption feature is opt-in, and needs to be turned on for every conversation, unlike WhatsApp, which automatically encrypts every chat by default. Additionally, “Secret Conversations” only encrypts text messages, photos, and videos sent in the thread, but it doesn&039;t protect audio and video calls.

Google Hangouts is fine, but isn&039;t as secure.

Hangouts (free, iOS, Android, and web) puts text messaging, audio calling, and video calling in one place – but it does not offer full encryption, so Google can wiretap conversations at the request of law enforcement. You&039;ll need to use Google Allo&039;s incognito mode for messaging and Google Duo for video chatting with end-to-end encryption.

And unlike WhatsApp or Facebook Messenger, which allow you to sign up with just your phone number and without a Facebook account, Hangouts requires a Google account.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed News


View Entire List ›

Quelle: <a href="Which Messaging App Should You Use?“>BuzzFeed

IBM Machine Learning comes to private cloud

Billions of transactions in banking, transportation, retail, insurance and other industries take place in the private cloud every day. For many enterprises, the z System mainframe is the home for all that data.
For data scientists, it can be hard to keep up with all that activity and those vast swaths of data. So IBM has taken its core Watson machine learning technology and applied it to the z System, enabling data scientists to automate the creation, training and deployment of analytic models to understand their data more completely.
IBM Machine Learning supports any language, any popular machine learning framework and any transactional data type without the cost, latency and risk that comes with moving data off premises. It also includes cognitive automation to help data scientists choose the right algorithms by which to analyze and process their organization&;s specific data stores.
One company that is evaluating the IBM Machine Learning technology is Argus Health, which hopes to help healthcare providers and patients navigate the increasingly complex healthcare landscape.
&;Helping our health plan clients achieve the best clinical and financial outcomes by getting the best care delivered at the best price in the most appropriate place is the mission of Argus while focused on the vision of becoming preeminent in providing pharmacy and healthcare solutions,&; said Marc Palmer, president of Argus Health.
For more, check out CIO Today&;s full article.
The post IBM Machine Learning comes to private cloud appeared first on news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud