Palantir CEO Alex Karp has reportedly paid out a record sum of $120 million to take ownership of a Colorado monastery that has, for the last seven decades, been carefully tended to by a group of ...
A former monastery tucked into the mountains outside Aspen has quietly set a price record, as Palantir Technologies co-founder and chief executive Alex Karp paid about $120 million for the vast ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Colorado’s most expensive real estate listing has been purchased by the CEO of Colorado’s most valuable public company. Alex Karp, co-founder and CEO of ...
Alex Karp has set a record with a nine-figure home purchase outside Aspen. The Palantir CEO spent $120 million for a ranch in Snowmass that once housed a monastery, the Wall Street Journal reported, ...
Palantir CEO Alex Karp has paid a record $120 million for a ranch outside Aspen, Colo., that was used for decades as a monastery, according to a source with knowledge of the deal. Located in Snowmass, ...
Representing Leon Black, Paul Weiss chairman Brad Karp corresponded with Jeffrey Epstein over a period of at least three years, according to emails released by the House Oversight Committee. Karp ...
Thought being the CEO of Palantir was hard? Try sitting still during an interview. During that storm of amazing ideas, Karp could be seen squirming in his seat, often half rising to his feet and ...
Alex Karp, the CEO of controversial tech company Palantir, raised eyebrows during a recent live interview with the New York Times. In a viral video of the discussion, Karp defended his company to the ...
Alex Karp — the CEO of Palantir, the not-a-surveillance company put forward by Elon Musk’s DOGE to supply the US government with software that allows ICE to track immigrants — is very offended that ...
DealBook Summit includes conversations with business and policy leaders at the heart of today’s major stories, recorded live at the annual DealBook Summit event in New York City. In a punchy ...
Palantir CEO Alex Karp on Wednesday argued that Americans have lost trust in major institutions because powerful executives routinely avoid consequences for their failures, saying "poor people" are ...