Peter Thiel's Secret 'Dialog' Society Exposed in Data Leak

A hacktivist leak has exposed Dialog, a secretive invitation-only network co-founded by Peter Thiel that convenes elites from politics, finance, military and tech.

A Society That Preferred the Shadows
For nearly two decades, a private network co-founded by billionaire Peter Thiel operated almost entirely beyond public view. That changed when a data leak dragged it into the open. According to Novara Media, in a report published on June 17, 2026, the group, known simply as Dialog, was established in 2006 by Thiel, the Palantir chairman, alongside data entrepreneur Auren Hoffman, and has functioned as a discreet gathering point for the powerful ever since.
Novara Media reports that a hacktivist who goes by maia arson crimew obtained and exposed a website directory tied to the organization. The exposed material reportedly included participant profiles complete with contact information and other personal details, turning a carefully guarded membership into a searchable record.
Who Was in the Room
Dialog operates as a venue for off-the-record summits that draw together figures from politics, finance, the military, entertainment and technology. Per Novara Media, the leaked profiles connected the network to a striking range of high-profile names, including:
- Texas Senator Ted Cruz
- U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
- Actors Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Josh Brolin
- Podcast host Sam Harris
The outlet also described an upcoming retreat planned for August 12 to 16, 2026, near Dublin. The expected guest list reportedly stretched across NATO commanders, Trump administration officials, sitting senators and executives drawn from surveillance firms, a roster that underscores the kind of cross-sector access the gatherings appear designed to cultivate.
An Agenda Built to Provoke
Part of what gives the disclosure its charge is the programming itself. According to Novara Media, scheduled conference sessions carried deliberately provocative titles such as "Navigating WWIII," "Battlefield Technologies" and "Build-a-Cult." Whatever the intended tone of those discussions, the labels offer a rare, if incomplete, window into the preoccupations of a circle that has worked hard to keep its conversations private.
The nature of off-the-record convenings is precisely that they leave little trace. By design, attendees can float ideas, forge connections and test positions without the accountability that comes with public speech. A leak like this one inverts that arrangement, attaching names, dates and topics to a forum built on discretion.
Why the Exposure Resonates
The timing lands squarely in the middle of an ongoing debate about the reach of Thiel's influence. From Palantir's expanding portfolio of government contracts to his well-documented political spending, Thiel has become a focal point for arguments about how a small number of technologists and financiers shape policy and public life. Critics have long contended that invitation-only gatherings of this kind concentrate power among an unaccountable few, insulated from scrutiny and ordinary democratic checks.
Novara Media's reporting hands that critique fresh and concrete detail. Rather than abstract concern about elite networking, the leak supplies specifics: who was expected to attend, when, and what they planned to discuss. For supporters, such forums are simply private spaces where serious people exchange ideas. For skeptics, the revelations confirm worries about the quiet machinery of influence operating outside public sight.
What happens next is uncertain. Exposed networks often respond by tightening security, relocating events or going quieter still, while the disclosure itself feeds wider conversations about transparency among the powerful. What is clear is that a society engineered to remain invisible has, at least for now, been pulled into the light, and the questions it raises about access, accountability and influence are unlikely to fade quickly.
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