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posted by hubie on Thursday October 23, @01:19PM   Printer-friendly

One topic dominated the recent 2025 OpenInfra Summit Europe, and it wasn't AI:

Unlike any tech conference I've attended in the last few years, the top issue at the 2025 OpenInfra Summit Europe at the École Polytechnique Paris was not AI. Shocking, I know. Indeed, OpenInfra Foundation general manager Thierry Carrez commented, "Did you notice what I didn't talk about in my keynote? I made no mention of AI." But one issue that did appear -- and would show up over and over again in the keynotes, the halls, and the vendor booths -- was digital sovereignty.

Digital sovereignty is the ability of a country, organization, or individual to control its own digital infrastructure, technologies, data, and online processes without undue external dependency on foreign entities or large technology companies. In other words, Europeans are tired of relying on what they see as increasingly unreliable American companies and the US government.

Carrez explained: "We've seen old alliances between the US and the EU being questioned or leveraged for immediate gains. We have seen the very terms of exchange of goods changing almost every day. And as a response to that, in Europe, we're moving to digital sovereignty." That shift, in turn, means open-source software.

"The world needs sovereign, high-performance and sustainable infrastructure," continued Carrez, "that remains interoperable and secure, while collaborating tightly with AI, containers and trusted execution environments. Open infrastructure allows nations and organizations to maintain control over their applications, their data, and their destiny while benefiting from global collaboration."

Carrez thinks a better word for what Europe wants is not isolation from the US: "What we're really looking for is resilience. What we want for our countries, for our companies, for ourselves, is resilience. Resilience in the face of unforeseen events in a fast-changing world. Open source," he concluded, "allows us to be sovereign without being isolated."

[...] To make life easier for users -- and to turn a profit, naturally -- many European companies are now offering technology programs to help users achieve digital sovereignty. These programs include Deutsche Telekom, with its Open Telekom Cloud, and OVH, STACKIT, and VanillaCore. Each of these companies relies on OpenStack to power its European-based cloud offerings for individuals, companies, and governments. In addition, other European open-source-based tech businesses, such as SUSE and NextCloud, offer digital sovereignty solutions using other programs.

In conversations at the conference, it became clear that while the changes in American government policy have been worrying Europeans, it's not just politics that has them concerned. People are also upset about Microsoft's 365 price increases. Another tech business issue that's unnerved them is Broadcom's acquisition of VMware and its subsequent massive price increases. This has led to a rise in the use of open-source office software, such as LibreOffice, and its web-based brother, Collabora Online, and the migration of VMware customers to OpenStack-based services.

The sovereignty issue is not going to go away. As Carrez said in a press conference: "It's extremely top of mind in the EU right now, it's what everyone is just talking about, and it's what everybody is doing." Open source is essential to this movement. As Mike McDonough, head of software product management for Catchengo, a "sovereign by design" cloud company, said: "No one can lock you up; no one can take it away from you, and if someone decides to fork the code, you can continue adopting it anywhere in the world."

All in all, participants agreed that Europe's sovereign cloud movement is reaching critical mass as governments and enterprises move data back from the US-based hyperscalers. European organizations are realizing they need more private infrastructure capacity and local talent to run big cloud initiatives. So, they're turning to open source because, as Carrez concluded, "what makes us resilient is our open-source community."


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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by VLM on Thursday October 23, @03:03PM (1 child)

    by VLM (445) Subscriber Badge on Thursday October 23, @03:03PM (#1421909)

    European organizations are realizing they need more private infrastructure capacity

    They need a solution to who controls the DNS system and similar very low level problems, but they're worried about user level stuff like "LibreOffice" hmm.

    Next level up is infrastructure like dockerhub.

    It is a top to bottom problem not a user application software level problem.

    Next problem: The easy way to install windows software is systems like chocolatey. Ooops now you need chocolatey.eu not chocolatey.org. Ooops now the problem is "choco install libreoffice" gets you something last updated in 2018. Well OK maybe if you're a bit of an insider or you google around you'll find out you want "choco install libreoffice-fresh" which was last updated to 25.8.1 on Sept 4th. Of course the latest upstream release branch is 25.8.2 which isn't on chocolatey yet whereas the most recent previous release is 25.2.6 which is available as "choco install libreoffice-still" although official security patch support ends in ... eight days. A bit of being stuck between a rock and a hard place.

    At least if you check out https://www.libreoffice.org/imprint [libreoffice.org] you'll see they're based in Berlin so no need to set up libreoffice.eu to replace libreoffice.org.

    All of this is rather moot, its 2025, nobody runs stuff locally on easily stolen laptops etc. We going to run libreoffice in the cluster and connect in the browser. So every user at work gets a linuxserver.io docker image of their own on the K8S cluster with an assortment of personal and shared cluster storage using https://docs.linuxserver.io/images/docker-libreoffice/ [linuxserver.io]

    1) Oh bleep the latest release is 25.2.5 not old-release 25.2.6 not release 25.8.2 ugh ugh ugh. Well, welcome to Fing 2025 I'm making a Dockerfile to manually install the latest libreoffice to an ... Alpine or Ubuntu linuxserver.io webtop.

    2) Oh bleep squared (cubed?) now we need to NIH and replicate linuxserver.io as linuxserver.eu for political reasons. Oh great such fun. Wait is it more EU-friendly to use the Alpine or the Ubuntu webtop docker container? Or "arch-xfce" because ARCH is (was?) Canadian (is Canada aka "New North India" euro enough to be considered EU?) although now Arch is mostly developed in Germany (or not)?

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  • (Score: -1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 24, @12:48AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 24, @12:48AM (#1421966)

    There there grandad, time for your meds.