01What happened
The story, straight
The Canadian government has disclosed a $46.8 million contract with Palantir Technologies that was previously kept secret. The contract is now being amended to include additional requirements and oversight measures, according to the Investigative Journalism Foundation. Details on the specific services Palantir provided under the contract remain limited.
Canada just revealed it spent $46.8 million on a secret Palantir contract and is now scrambling to bolt on oversight after the fact. The Investigative Journalism Foundation broke the story. What Palantir actually delivered for that money is still pretty murky.
02Spread timeline
Where it actually started
03Source receipts
Every claim, linked
04What's solid, what isn't
What's solid and what isn't
- The Canadian government spent $46.8 million on a Palantir contract.
- The contract is being amended to include additional requirements and oversight measures.
- The Investigative Journalism Foundation reported the story.
- The specific nature of services Palantir delivered under the contract.
- When the contract was originally signed.
- Which Canadian government departments or agencies are involved.
- The amendment process and what new oversight measures will look like in practice.
05Why it matters
The editorial take
Palantir's government contracts have faced scrutiny in the U.S., U.K., and elsewhere for opacity and civil-liberties concerns. Canada quietly signing a $46.8M deal — and only adding oversight requirements after disclosure — raises familiar questions about procurement transparency and the surveillance-technology pipeline into democratic governments.
Palantir keeps collecting massive government contracts with minimal public debate. Canada doing it in secret and only adding oversight after getting caught is the pattern playing out again — different country, same playbook.
