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Exclusive: Palantir Inks HD Hyundai Deal Worth Hundreds of Millions, CEO Bullish on Korea

U.S. data analytics firm Palantir has signed an expanded software agreement with South Korea’s HD Hyundai, a deal worth hundreds of millions of dollars over several years, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The agreement deepens a partnership that began in 2021 and strengthens Palantir’s presence in heavy industry in South Korea. The companies held a signing ceremony during the World Economic Forum in Davos, where Palantir set up temporary offices. While Palantir declined to disclose financial terms, the deal broadens earlier collaboration into an enterprise-wide arrangement.

Palantir’s software integrates data from across operations and uses automation and artificial intelligence to guide decision-making. With HD Hyundai, the technology has been applied to shipbuilding, construction equipment and energy-related operations. The companies have said HD Hyundai is now building ships around 30% faster by using Palantir tools to better manage materials, machinery, planning and schedules.

Palantir chief executive Alex Karp said he is “very bullish” on South Korea, calling it an innovative and dynamic market. He added that while Palantir remains primarily focused on the United States, Korea stands out as a key international opportunity as global demand for the company’s software continues to grow.

C3 AI Reportedly Exploring Sale After Founder-CEO Thomas Siebel Steps Down

C3 AI, a California-based enterprise artificial intelligence software company, is reportedly exploring a potential sale following the recent departure of its founder and long-time CEO Thomas Siebel due to health concerns, according to sources familiar with the matter.

The process is said to be in its early stages, with C3 AI also considering other strategic options, including raising private capital, the sources told Reuters. The company, headquartered in Redwood City, provides a platform used by clients such as Shell and the U.S. Air Force to build and operate large-scale AI applications. Its software is widely used across energy, manufacturing, and government sectors, positioning it as a smaller competitor to Palantir Technologies.

C3 AI currently has a market value of around $2.15 billion, but its shares have dropped over 54% this year amid financial struggles and uncertainty surrounding leadership changes.

In its most recent quarterly report, the company disclosed a net loss of $116.8 million (or $0.86 per share) for the fiscal quarter ending July 31, alongside a 19% revenue drop to $70.3 million. C3 AI also withdrew its full-year forecast in September, citing management transitions and a restructuring of its sales and service operations.

The company’s leadership transition saw Salesforce veteran Stephen Ehikian assume the CEO role on September 1, succeeding Siebel, who has moved to the position of executive chairman after revealing an autoimmune disease causing severe visual impairment.

Siebel, a renowned Silicon Valley entrepreneur, is best known for founding Siebel Systems, which he sold to Oracle in 2005 for $5.85 billion.

C3 AI’s board includes several prominent figures, such as former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Fortune CEO Alan Murray, and former Apple general counsel Bruce Sewell.

U.S. Army Memo Flags “Very High Risk” Security Flaws in Anduril–Palantir Battlefield Network

The U.S. Army’s next-generation battlefield communications system, developed by Anduril Industries and Palantir Technologies, has been labeled “very high risk” due to critical cybersecurity vulnerabilities, according to an internal Army memo reviewed by Reuters.

The September 5 memo—written by Gabriele Chiulli, the Army’s Chief Technology Officer and authorizing official for the NGC2 (Next Generation Command and Control) prototype—warned that the system’s “current security posture” could allow adversaries to gain “persistent undetectable access” to sensitive battlefield data.

“We cannot control who sees what, we cannot see what users are doing, and we cannot verify that the software itself is secure,” the memo stated, citing fundamental issues in user access controls and data monitoring.

The NGC2 platform, designed to connect soldiers, sensors, vehicles, and commanders through real-time data sharing, is central to the Army’s modernization drive. Developed in partnership with Microsoft and smaller defense contractors, the project aims to replace legacy communication systems with a unified, AI-enhanced digital backbone.

However, the internal review found that the platform allowed all users to access all applications and data, regardless of clearance level or mission relevance, and lacked logging tools to track user activity. One third-party application integrated into the system was found to contain 25 high-severity vulnerabilities, while three others each had more than 200 issues requiring review.

The memo’s findings—first reported by Breaking Defense—have amplified criticism that Silicon Valley’s “move fast and break things” ethos may be ill-suited for military-grade systems requiring airtight security.

Anduril, founded by Palmer Luckey, dismissed the concerns as outdated. “The report reflects an old snapshot, not the current state of the program,” the company said. Palantir responded that “no vulnerabilities were found in the Palantir platform.”

Army Chief Information Officer Leonel Garciga, Chiulli’s supervisor, acknowledged the seriousness of the findings but said most issues were fixed within “weeks or even days.” He added that only one remaining application still required security improvements and that Palantir’s Federal Cloud Service could soon receive “continuous authority to operate”, allowing faster updates.

The NGC2 system was awarded a $100 million prototype contract earlier this year, as part of a broader Pentagon effort to integrate AI, autonomous systems, and real-time battlefield intelligence into defense operations. Palantir also holds a $480 million contract for Project Maven, the Pentagon’s AI surveillance initiative, while Anduril recently secured $159 million to develop advanced mixed-reality and night vision systems.

Despite assurances from developers, the memo raises profound questions about data control, cybersecurity, and insider access—all crucial concerns as the U.S. military increasingly relies on software-driven decision-making in combat.

On Wall Street, the revelations hit Palantir’s stock, which fell 7.5% on Friday. Anduril, still privately held, has said it plans to go public.

The incident exposes the tension at the heart of the Pentagon’s modernization push: how to harness Silicon Valley’s speed and innovation without compromising the security of national defense networks.