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BEIJING BUILT ITS PALANTIR: WHERE IS INDIA’S?

The Sunday Guardian

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November 02, 2025

Deepexi Technology, China’s answer to Palantir, ignited a frenzy that didn’t just move stock tickers. It asked a question that echoes now in New Delhi’s power corridors: ‘If China is betting on data as strategic infrastructure, why isn’t India?’

- BRIJESH SINGH

When a market bets so fiercely on a single company that its IPO is oversubscribed seventy-five hundred times, it’s not just numbers—it’s a signal.

That's the tremor rippling through Hong Kong this autumn, as Deepexi Technology, China’s answer to Palantir, ignited a frenzy that didn’t just move stock tickers. It asked a question that echoes now in New Delhi’s power corridors: “If China is betting on data as strategic infrastructure, why isn't India?”

The timing is not accidental. India, the world’s fifth-largest economy, navigates a security landscape where snow lines the Line of Actual Control and cyber threats slither through digital borders like shadowy predators. It has landed rovers on the moon, built a payments system for billions, yet finds itself adrift in a critical arena: sovereign data fusion—the ability to turn fragmented information into actionable intelligence, fast. This is not a gap of technology alone; it is a gap of vision. And in an era where software defines war and peace, that gap could become a chasm.

threads before they strangled us?” The answer was Gotham, a platform that didn’t just store data—it wove it into a living tapestry. Financial records from Karachi, satellite imagery of desert roads, social media posts in Kabul—all stitched together so analysts could ask, “Show me every truck carrying explosives north of Kandahar this week” and get a map back in seconds. It worked. In Iraq, it predicted 80% of roadside bomb attacks; in Afghanistan, it tracked insurgent supply lines through the chaos of mountain passes. The Pentagon didn’t just “buy” Palantir—it “depended” on it.

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