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THE BIG IDEA |
Roommates, PayPal fraud, and the unconventional story behind Palantir |
When your clients include the CIA, NSA, FBI, and a bunch of other folks on that level, it’s safe to say you’ve built something noteworthy. Yesterday, lucrative software firm Palantir reported $341m in Q1 revenue (+49% YoY). But without 2 dudes rooming together in law school, Palantir would likely never have existed. Unsurprisingly, its story begins at StanfordThat’s where Peter Thiel and Alex Karp were roommates, and received their JDs in 1992. Following that:
At PayPal, Thiel dealt with rampant fraud that at one point made up 1%+ of PayPal’s total volume. Thiel & Co. refocused the company around building tools to help humans track internet fraudsters, and PayPal was sold in 2002. That’s when Karp — broke and jobless — returned from abroadThiel called him up and said, “Hey, Alex, there’s this methodology we had at PayPal. Think it would make a great company for stopping terrorism.” So in 2004, Thiel assembled Palantir’s founding team, with Karp as CEO. A ~$2m investment helped develop a prototype — based on tech developed at PayPal — and get a foot in the government’s door. The team had zero experience with classified info, but a demo was intriguing enough that Palantir continued working with intelligence officials. And the rest is history. (More or less.) So what the heck does Palantir do now?Years later, Palantir has 149 customers across the public and private sectors. It boasts:
Perhaps the least surprising thing from yesterday’s announcement: Palantir is accepting payments in bitcoin. |
SNIPPETS |
OLD TECH |
Boomers are moving online. How are companies coping? |
Baby boomers are not afraid to open their wallets. According to The Economist, households led by this generation — born between 1946 and 1964 (aged 57-75) — spend $64k a year. This figure is nearly 2x the spend by those born after 1997. The pandemic ushered many onlineIn 2020, one American boomer segment — those over-65s — upped their online shopping by 53% YoY. Here’s what they dropped money on:
SilverSingles — a seniors dating site — notes healthy growth, while consumer goods giants like Nestle and Danone rolled out drinks to promote healthy aging (e.g., by improving mobility, immunity). Despite the spending power…… only 3% of ads in the US target over-50s, per The Economist. Corporations clearly have room to allocate more resources there. Further, companies have room to improve their digital experiences for the older set with:
When it comes to serving this spendy generation, saying “OK, boomer” to their needs makes a lot of business sense. |
BIG TECH |
Facebook wants you to read before you share |
Listen up, aunts and uncles of the world: Your indiscriminate posting of random stuff on Facebook is about to hit a roadblock. The social network is testing a pop-up that will remind people they might want to actually read something before they tell all their friends and families. Sometimes not sharing is caringIf someone tries to share an article they haven’t opened, the pop-up will warn them they might be “missing key facts.” They can then choose to open the article or share it anyhow. A Facebook spokesperson told the Verge the pilot will start with 6% of Android users. Facebook announced the rollout on Monday via Twitter, where a similar function has been in effect since last June. In September 2020, Twitter said people opened articles 40% more often after seeing its pop-up. How much don’t people read?
So, either your uncle posts better links… or the pop-ups create enough friction to lead to less sharing. Win, win. (The writer was a contractor at Facebook in 2019.) |
PODCAST |
How much does the UFC make?Twenty years ago, Dana White bought the mixed martial arts promotion company for $2m. Today it’s worth billions. In episode 179 of My First Million, we dive into the UFC’s numbers and how Dana was able to pull it off. We also talk:
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🎧 Listen here → |
TRENDS |
$3.1B in funding in 2020 alone…Did you read yesterday’s Trends report? We covered:
Get 7 days of Trends for just $1, and read the full issue now. |
TECH BEEF OF THE DAY |
The home of “double can’t skip ads” (Source: Thomas Trutschel / Getty Images) |
Google went nuclear in its battle with Roku, the video streaming hardware firm. Here’s a blow by blow, per Ars Technica:
Due to the popularity of the main YouTube app, Roku would be committing corporate suicide by removing it. As of right now, it looks like Google may have checkmated its opponent (but courts may still intervene). |