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Not on our watch: Coles, Palantir respond to GetUp anti-surveillance campaign

A new GetUp petition is calling for Coles to end its “partnership” with data analytics firm Palantir over surveillance fears – but Coles says Palantir’s software is used for analysis, not surveillance.

Wed, 04 Mar 2026
Not on our watch: Coles, Palantir respond to GetUp anti-surveillance campaign

Supermarket giant Coles has responded to a petition calling on the store to sever its ties with American tech firm Palantir.

The campaign, run by activist group GetUp, calls on Coles to “keep military-grade surveillance tech out of our supermarkets”.

“Coles says Palantir is being used for internal planning purposes – but also that their tools have access to ‘10 billion rows of data’ across more than 840 supermarkets. That’s all we’ve been told,” GetUp said in its petition.

 
 

GetUp noted that Coles is known to collect “vast amounts” of shopper data, as well as making use of video and audio surveillance in its stores.

“And right now, we don’t know whether Palantir has access – directly or indirectly – to systems containing our customer data or in-store surveillance feeds,” GetUp said.

Coles has responded to the campaign by explaining what it does in fact use Palantir’s technology for – and it’s not surveillance.

“Coles uses this software as a data integration and analytics platform, which helps our team members make practical, informed decisions across our business,” a Coles spokesperson told Cyber Daily.

“The software is used for bakery production planning, evaluating promotions, rostering and providing insights for retail media performance reporting. It’s an operational platform focused on helping stores run more effectively.”

The company said Palantir’s software is under its sole control and that Palantir cannot repurpose any data collected by Coles.

Palantir’s response was more open-ended, and while it did not refer to Coles specifically, it explained the limits of its partnerships with other organisations.

“Palantir software is used in a range of settings to deliver better outcomes – including helping Ukraine to defend itself from Russian aggression, the NHS in England to deliver more operations, and the World Food Programme to deliver food to remote areas of the world,” a Palantir spokesperson said.

“Whichever customer uses the software, legally and contractually, the software can only be used to process data in strict accordance with the wishes of the customer.”

David Hollingworth

David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.

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