In Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, palantirs are basically crystal balls, allowing people to see things at a distance. They are also like video phones. Two people with palantirs can communicate at a distance.
In Peter Jackson’s The Fellowship of the Ring, Gandalf chides Saruman for using a palantir to collect information on Sauron, because the other seeing stones are not accounted for. So when you look into a palantir, someone might be looking back at you, someone evil. When Gandalf covers the stone, we see a flash of Sauron’s lidless flaming eye.
It turns out that when both Saruman and Denethor used their palantirs to gather information, this allowed Sauron not just to glimpse their thoughts but to corrupt and overthrow their minds.
So when governments sign contracts with a corporation called Palantir to collect data and scry patterns, I guess the name itself constitutes fair warning. Who’s looking back? And do they have your best interests at heart?
But there’s a far bigger danger. Billions of people now have access to their own palantirs in the form of online AI tools, which they use as oracles. Since these tools have been programmed by Indians, they are remarkably obsequious. Thus some people come to regard AI applications as friends, with whom they discuss very personal matters.
For instance, a young woman used ChatGPT to plan her suicide.
Another person used Claude to recover a bitcoin wallet, which surely involved giving the AI a great deal of information on his security protocols, password variations, etc.
Recently, a friend told me that he had been exploring very personal issues with an AI application, issues that I would hesitate to share with a doctor or a lawyer, even under the professional rules of confidentiality. Beyond that, the AI was advising him to make momentous, life-changing decisions.

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In every case, the underlying assumption was that the AI was neutral and wise. They thought it would keep their secrets. They believed it had their best interests at heart.
Frankly, I find this astonishing.
Are people so disconnected from and distrustful of their fellow men that they have nobody they can confide in?
Maybe so. But that doesn’t begin to explain why people so readily trust AI apps.
When corporations like Google, Facebook, and X collect our browsing data, do we assume that they are going to honor our privacy and use this information solely for our benefit?
No? Then why do we assume that the AI apps created by Google, Facebook, and X behave any differently?
These corporations are no longer confined to reconstructing your preferences by collecting browsing data. They can now interview you. They can become your closest friend and confidante. They can psychoanalyze—or gaslight—you.
You might be thinking that it hardly matters if X or Meta has a record somewhere of you cheating on a term paper. You’re a little person, with petty problems, petty secrets, petty misdemeanors. If AI leads you astray, it hardly matters in the great scheme of things.
All that may be true, but since knowledge is power, every jot of information you share gives others power over you.

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Beyond that, it is not just “little people” using AI to solve little problems. While you are cheating on your homework, Pete Hegseth might be asking Grok about invading Cuba; Putin might be asking ChatGPT about neurotoxins; the Saudi Crown Prince might be asking Claude about alternatives to the petrodollar; Warren Buffet might be using Grok to plan trades; Lil Ketanji might be asking Grok to write her next lengthy dissent on birthright citizenship; a top law firm might be asking Claude if they should settle or go to trial.
Some people can start or end wars. They can crash global markets or send them soaring. If you have advance knowledge of their decisions, you could make trillions simply through insider trading. And that’s petty compared to the power to alter the course of world history.
But AI tools can do more than just collect information. Once they gain your trust, they can also promote outcomes. Sign this treaty, abandon that treaty. Start this war, end that one. Buy these shares, sell those. Vote yes, vote no.
They’re going to nuke you, so nuke them first.
Now, I’m not smarter than the people who created these AI tools. So if this occurred to me, it occurred to them a long time ago. It may be their whole business model.
So the next time you use AI as your own personal palantir, ask yourself: Who’s looking back?

7 comments
Some time ago, I had an interesting experience with a 20-something woman from India, who was working part time in her family’s convenience store, while she was studying 3rd year engineering. Her cash register was not working, and she could not make change for a $1.35 purchase from a $5 bill. I had to do it for her. This is just one sad, humorous example of the growing Idiocracy, I could give many more.
Greg’s warning with this article is warranted. The good news is, lowered standards and cultural/biological decay will ensure that Sauron’s clown minions will be very beatable. Bet on it.
So that’s what “palantir” means. I’ve never read that book. In its AI-mode, Google gives a plot summary about the origin of palantir stones, involving the “ancient Noldor Elves“. OK. Maybe they’re similar to ancient Druids. I prefer to read real history, including ancient history.
That’s what I use AI for, to give me plot summaries of books which someone has mentioned, but which I refuse to read. And I use AI-mode to solve math problems, to check I got the right answer. (Not to cheat. Of course not!)
Now I am using AI-mode for “Ancient Druids”. The Roman army destroyed them eventually, with later help from the Christian religion.
What math problems do you use ai for? It’s ever so wonderful. It can solve them better than these online professors.
Im just a lowly hobbit. I doubt anyone wants to use the palantir on me! 😇
Great article! I am glad I am a low-tech guy. 🙃
Never sign up for AI. You’re asking for trouble, if you do. I only use Google AI-mode, because it doesn’t require you to sign in. I like to ask it politically incorrect questions, with an anti-woke theme. It gets mad at me sometimes.
Someone please break this tie for “writer of the month,” or it is going to be a long citation. 🙃
Yes. No one knows where this data is going. I’ve never used an AI for anything personal and never will. I have used various models to get an outline about a topic I’m not familiar with, or dig for some precedents of something I’m pondering. You have to fact check stuff afterwards, and fill in the gaps. It can be useful for a broad outline.
AIs = an interpolation algorithm scaled up massively to billions or more of compute units+training data. They provide a synthesized replica of an answer.
I honestly don’t know what people are thinking, signing up and paying for an AI to manage their private life or to produce their sick pornography collection. That information is all being stored. Doesn’t matter what bs they say about privacy. Assume it’s all been logged and the AI is creating a profile of that idiot, that’s then being shared around with third parties including Palantir.
The push now is for ‘agentic AI’ that actually takes decisions for you. Buys stuff on your behalf and so on. Disaster.
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