

I agree but that’s a somewhat different discussion IMO.
Even if Palantir’s software was just a simple interface for a database, the fact that it’s proprietary means that there could be secret backdoors for the US Intelligence community to look at the data. There almost certainly are. That makes it an issue of national security on top of one of personal liberty.
So Palantir sells a data management tool and deployment support. That shouldn’t really surprise anyone who knows the first thing about data science.
The interesting thing about Palantir isn’t what they sell but how they sell it and who buys it. They clearly market their unremarkable software as an autocrat’s wet dream.
And police and military departments across Europe and the US buy their shit, which says more about those police and military departments than about the software.