Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:
As geopolitical tensions abound, France is going all in on its strategy to stop using foreign software vendors, announcing plans to move departments to homegrown Visio.
France’s David Amiel, minister for the civil service and state reform, is expected to issue a mandate to all government departments in coming days, to cease using US videoconferencing products like Zoom, Microsoft Teams and Google Meet, in favour of French-developed Visio. The government says it will be used in all Government departments by 2027, according to reporting from Euronews.
France has long telegraphed its determination to gain control over it digital infrastructure, and its strategy to favour homegrown vendors over their US counterparts. All this as digital sovereignty is becoming a burning issue in Europe.
Back in 2020, Brussels-based GAIA-X was formed to align with the EU’s Digital Strategy to enhance Europe’s competitiveness in the digital economy while safeguarding data and digital infrastructure from external influence. The Gaia-X European Association for Data and Cloud AISBL is composed of members from industry, research organisations, and government bodies. GAIA-X is backed by European governments, particularly Germany and France, according to the OECD.
As for France, this latest move is designed, says Amiel, to “end the use of non-European solutions and guarantee the security and confidentiality of public electronic communications by relying on a powerful and sovereign tool”.
Visio is part of France’s Suite Numérique, a digital suite of sovereign tools for civil servants, and is hosted on another French company’s sovereign cloud infrastructure, Outscale (a Dassault Systèmes subsidiary). French start-up Pyannote supplies the AI transcription and diary tools. Just last summer civil servants were ordered off WhatsApp and Telegram and told to use Tchap, a messaging service created specifically for them.
The French Government says it could save up to €1m a year in licensing fees through the switch to Visio, but that appears to be a side bonus, as the real goal is to cut its reliance on foreign providers for its critical digital infrastructure.
“This strategy highlights France’s commitment to digital sovereignty amid rising geopolitical tensions and fears of foreign surveillance or service disruptions,” Amiel said.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday February 03, @05:13PM (4 children)
> You seem to be assuming that 35 years of progress in machine translation, not to mention the "AI revolution", hasn't gutted the EU's natural language translation industry.
Not at all, that's why I stated the year (37 years ago) - the € gutted a huge industry as well, for those who use it. My sister in law retired early from a job in medical transcription for similar reasons: Dragon Naturally Speaking and friends gutted her industry 25ish years ago.
My point is that sovereign video conferencing apps will be a return to the national fragmentation of things. I suppose if you're nostalgic for standing in line at Thomas Cook because you met a girlfriend that way once, you might want to see it return - but I don't think most people do. Anyway, this won't be bringing that feature of the fragmented world back - this will just be complicating people's daily lives for the sake of local control.
>I suspect there will need to be some kind of compatability layer developed to allow for interoperability
And that may be the ultimate benefit of this move, iff the presence of all these diverse video conferencing tools finally forces open, stable standards to emerge so they can interoperate properly. But, like somebody said about calendar app standards: I haven't seen that working anywhere near properly yet, even though it's the kind of thing we _could have_ solved back in Palm Pilot days or even earlier.
🌻🌻🌻🌻 [google.com]
(Score: 1) by arubaro on Tuesday February 03, @06:02PM (1 child)
> My point is that sovereign video conferencing apps will be a return to the national fragmentation of things. I suppose if you're nostalgic for standing in line at Thomas Cook because you met a girlfriend that way once, you might want to see it return - but I don't think most people do. Anyway, this won't be bringing that feature of the fragmented world back - this will just be complicating people's daily lives for the sake of local control.
Given that the option at this moment is to depend in USA companies, i think it is worth the move.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday February 03, @08:04PM
>Given that the option at this moment is to depend in USA companies, i think it is worth the move.
I would agree. The Visio announcement seems to be a very "France-centric" statement - it would be better if it were more of a pan-European effort.
🌻🌻🌻🌻 [google.com]
(Score: 4, Insightful) by zocalo on Tuesday February 03, @09:14PM (1 child)
Frankly, I'm not seeing too many negatives with this. It's open source, claimed to be GDPR compliant, challenges the privacy raping monopolies of Microsoft, Meta, etc., and enables each country (or company) to establish and manage their own infrastructure as they see fit. Like Mastodon for social media, it has the potential of a federated approach to video conferencing and allowing easy interaction between systems, but also has the same challenge; gaining traction against the entrenched forces of Teams/WhatsApp/Zoom. Still, if more EU governments start taking it onboard - and the US is certainly making that a prudent option at the moment - then that might not be such a stretch. The very best case would be if they publish and promote the standards and encourage, or even assist, the open source community to develop their own clients and tools (as they no doubt would) - in that scenario we might even be able to start returning at least some control of the Internet back to the users and away from the current handful of .COM megacorps.
UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday February 03, @09:27PM
>we might even be able to start returning at least some control of the Internet back to the users and away from the current handful of .COM megacorps.
Dream on, Don. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Quixote [wikipedia.org]
🌻🌻🌻🌻 [google.com]