Now that it is official US policy to promote regime change in Europe and to dismantle the EU I wonder if we will take sovereignty over tech more seriously
Now that it is official US policy to promote regime change in Europe and to dismantle the EU I wonder if we will take sovereignty over tech more seriously
@Techaltar I tried to have that conversation with multiple executives here in belgium and it's a big no.
@WowSuchCyber I think you have to start seeing actual massive impacts, like companies in your own industry being severely hurt, before making a big change. A hypothetical future is not for change enough even if it feels like it should be
@Techaltar I mean a bank went bankrupt because they lost access to azure already and nobody even know about it https://www.gtreview.com/news/europe/solvent-but-bankrupt-how-sanctions-felled-amsterdam-trade-bank/
@WowSuchCyber yeah I mentioned this in my video as well, but I think people can mentally separate themselves from this because it's related to Russia and so it feels different. Even if it should be making us nervous
@Techaltar approach in #russia " #china you want to 5G spy on us? Ok but only with our #encryption"
@Techaltar @GossiTheDog The problem (IMO) with the EU is that there's not enough "Union" among members. I'm sure the original EU Commission set itself up to manage the member states so that agreements could be made, and dissent would be eliminated by rounds of debate y'know, like a democracy). This, however has been shown not to be the case and the wavering over sanctions and support for the war in Ukraine has shown the weakness in the system where member states' alleged vested interests and maybe secret alliances with the aggressor work against Union. So in the event of a "push" into Europe, there wouldn't be the strong bond to repel this, and really it's so obvious now that even the Orange Guy can see it, and he's watching the EU unintentionally dismantle itself. If you want further proof, ask about the European Army.
@Techaltar I wish they'd thought about it 10 years ago.
@Techaltar @cstross European politicians might talk about sovereign cloud, but as long as they have the hots for Palantir, and EU startups get VC money from a16z & co, we’ll stay at the mercy of this adversarial regime.
@Techaltar that would require them to actually invest in things, change the way they do business, and stop deluding themselves into believing that Microsoft, AWS, et. al. won't eagerly roll over for a Nazi regime.
So, no.
@Techaltar Vast amounts of state information in my country is stored on Microsoft azure and Oracle databases. These US corporations who profit from very suspect practices, plus their software is also really shit. I really hope EU countries like mine migrate from these rubbish companies to superior European based ones ASAP.
@Techaltar as a citizen of the USA i hope you do! The monopolies are toppling the world.
@Techaltar Unlikely as they incentivise things
@Techaltar Of course no.
The majority of the EU politicians have been trained by the US in the "Young Leaders" program.
I'd be extremely surprised anyone of them has enough spine to resist to US pressure.
@Techaltar would you mind if I post a screenshot of this message on my WhatsApp status?
@Techaltar I'm sorry, but did you ask the trump administration to post this????
@Techaltar no, Windows everywhere, and M365
@Techaltar not with our current crop of "leaders", just roll over and offer the throat up...
@Techaltar Probably too many people willing to assist usa
@Techaltar Not only technology, I started making changes in my life 1 year ago. I don't buy any products made in the US or from US companies, except things that get out of my hands (Windows on the computer, Google Services and paying with a VISA or MasterCard). My browser is Vivaldi, my search engine is Qwant, my antivirus is Bitfender, my AI chat is Mistral, my email is Tutamail, my cloud is Internxt and much more! Let's do it together and show that Europe does not depend on the US 
@Techaltar the US could cripple Europe, just by having a go-slow on Amazon, Google and Microsoft clouds.
Plus, US law means even if those data centres are in Europe, if the US government demands the data, those US companies must hand it over. Our data isn't safe.
@Techaltar I sure hope so?
[ EU needs to grow a spine and retaliate with changing the copyright directive: Decriminalise cracking DRM & making, distributing, and using the cracking tools ]
@Techaltar Is this referring to a specific event or the general zeitgeist?
@thibaultamartin I'm pretty sure @Techaltar is referring to the recent kerfuffle about the US national security policy.
@Techaltar You know the answer, don't you? Any effort will be crippled by inefficiency or 'muh, centralisation'.
@Techaltar Habits are hard to change, but the news won't get any better in the near future. That and EU regulation combined could actually lead to lasting change. It's also a big business opportunity for European countries, often overlooked. I'm optimistic!
@Techaltar for @apell, I work on the EU Open Source Awards project, one of the efforts we work on to raise awareness for the strategic importance of Open Source for digital sovereignty. I’d like to invite you to the gala, could we get in touch?
@Techaltar certainly made me switch to proton right after 😂
@Techaltar no #Europe will continue to buy #US #iphone made in #China X-D
My personal opinion, NO!
@Techaltar if it raises prices, then I fear, that the answer is no.