Boeing has joined forces with Palantir to bring artificial intelligence into its defense and space operations, aiming to change how its military programs are managed and run.
The deal was made public at the Air, Space & Cyber Conference, where both companies confirmed they’re working together to embed AI software and systems into Boeing Defense, Space & Security (BDS) factories and projects.
BDS is counting on Palantir’s Foundry platform to do the heavy lifting. Foundry combines messy, scattered data systems and pulls them into one place through a single dashboard.
Boeing runs over a dozen high-scale production lines where it builds military jets, helicopters, satellites, spacecraft, missiles, and weapons. By using Palantir’s platform, the goal is to bring all that scattered data under one roof; standardized, tracked, and easy to act on across its far-flung factory network.
“Palantir is on the cutting edge when it comes to leveraging Artificial Intelligence to accelerate getting critical products, services and capabilities in the hands of military operators,” said Steve Parker, CEO of Boeing Defense, Space & Security. “This collaboration is a natural fit that brings together two great companies with a common mission: supporting uniformed personnel in protecting freedom around the world.”
Palantir supports Boeing with secretive military programs
Beyond factory floors and production metrics, Boeing has hired Palantir to help on multiple classified military assignments. The details are locked up, but the focus is on enhancing support for America’s most sensitive national security operations.
“Palantir and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are committed to delivering dominant capabilities to the warfighter to deter conflict and defend the homeland,” said Mike Gallagher, Palantir’s Head of Defense. “This partnership will turbocharge production and innovation, allowing Boeing and Palantir to bring cutting-edge technology to current and next-generation defense programs. America’s enemies aren’t slowing down and neither can we.”
Palantir is not new to defense or surveillance. Its AI tools are already central to the tech stack used by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
A pile of internal documents leaked from the Department of Homeland Security shows just how deep that tech goes, and how little oversight exists. Palantir’s platforms power invasive surveillance tools that track student visas, GPS locations, travel history, phone metadata, and more.
Two systems in particular, FALCON and ICM, have become the backbone of ICE operations. FALCON is Palantir’s investigative platform for Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). It connects dozens of commercial and government databases.
Agents can run bulk searches, tap into mobile phone forensics, send secure field messages, and even track each other’s GPS locations through the mobile app.
Meanwhile, ICM, Palantir’s other system, runs the internal task force records for ICE. It logs investigations, structures how cases are handled, and feeds data into FALCON. ICM focuses on both criminal and deportation-related tracking through ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations.
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Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/boeing-palantir-ai-into-defense-and-space/