(Some organizations do have “The” in the name itself, e.g. The Heritage Foundation. They could decide to drop the “The”, and then their logo would say “Heritage Foundation”. But one would still write “at the Heritage Foundation”; one just wouldn’t write “at The Heritage Foundation”.)
Military units are the only counterexample I can think of, but using “the” is correct for them too, I think. Glancing at wikipedia, it is inconsistent within articles,
During January 1919, the Third Army was engaged in training and preparing the troops under its command for any contingency...Accordingly the Third Army was disbanded on 2 July 1919.
and
Until the buildup of American forces prior to its entry into World War II, Third Army remained largely a paper formation...Mobilization saw Third Army take on the role of training some of the huge numbers of recruits that the draft was bringing into the Armed Forces.
Perhaps Singularity Institute is an aspiring paramilitary force.
Military units are the only counterexample I can think of, but using “the” is correct for them too, I think. Glancing at wikipedia, it is inconsistent within articles,
and
Perhaps Singularity Institute is an aspiring paramilitary force.