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Palantir Contracts Have Become ‘An Unacceptable Point of Weakness,’ UK Politicians Warn
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Palantir Contracts Have Become ‘An Unacceptable Point of Weakness,’ UK Politicians Warn

Wired · Jun 2, 2026, 11:05 PM

Key takeaways

  • “We know that with vendor lock-in, over time, we’ll get more expensive and worse services,” Dame Chi Onwurah, chair of the committee and member of Parliament, tells WIRED. “It’s a trap that has to be avoided.”
  • In a worst-case scenario, a deeply entrenched supplier could threaten to withhold service as a way of imposing its will, Onwurah believes. “That could bring public services and our economy to a halt,” she says.
  • “We have a key vendor saying they will exercise technology in accordance with their political mission,” Onwurah says.

Why this matters: a development in AI with implications for how people work, create, and decide.

Photo-Illustration: WIRED Staff; Getty Images Comment Loader Save Story Save this story Comment Loader Save Story Save this story. A bipartisan group of UK politicians is sounding the alarm over the country's partnership with the data analytics company Palantir.

In a report published Tuesday, the 11 members of Parliament’s Science, Innovation, and Technology Committee warned that the country’s ballooning reliance on Palantir’s technology “represents an unacceptable point of weakness” that could hand the company overwhelming bargaining power in future negotiations.

“We know that with vendor lock-in, over time, we’ll get more expensive and worse services,” Dame Chi Onwurah, chair of the committee and member of Parliament, tells WIRED. “It’s a trap that has to be avoided.”

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