--- --- --- --- Entire Story Below - Must Be Edited --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story [theregister.com]:
A group of technology companies and lobbyists want the European Commission (EC) to take action to reduce the region's reliance on foreign-owned digital services and infrastructure.
In an open letter to EC President Ursula von der Leyen and Executive Vice-President for Tech Sovereignty Henna Virkkunen, the group of nearly 100 organizations proposed the creation of a sovereign infrastructure fund to invest in key technology and lessen dependence on US corporations.
The letter [euro-stackletter.eu] points to recent events, including the farcical Munich Security Conference [reuters.com], as a sign of "the stark geopolitical reality Europe is now facing," and says that building strategic autonomy in key sectors is now an urgent imperative for European countries.
Signatories include aerospace giant Airbus, France's Dassault Systèmes, European cloud operator OVHcloud, chip designer SiPearl, open source biz Nextcloud, and a host of others including organizations such as the European Startup Network.
OVHcloud said the group was calling "for a collective industrial policy strategy to strengthen Europe's competitiveness and strategic autonomy. We are convinced this is the premise of what we hope will be a larger movement of the entire ecosystem."
Proposals include the sovereign infrastructure fund, which would be able to support public investment, especially in capital-intensive sectors like semiconductors, with "significant additional commitment of funds allocated and/or underwritten" by the European Investment Bank (EIB) and national public funding bodies.
It also suggests there should be a formal requirement for the public sector to "buy European" and source their IT requirements from European-led and assembled solutions, while recognizing that these may involve complex supply chains with foreign components.
The letter warns that while the region has great talent and capabilities in the digital space, issues such as structural fragmentation, as described in the Draghi report [europa.eu] on EU competitiveness, have led to the region falling significantly behind the US and China in many areas.
This has led to multiple tech dependencies that represent security and reliability risks that "compromise our sovereignty," the group says, calling for action to address the problem.
"We call on your convening powers to mobilize industry to actively help coordinate and validate a continent-wide strategy to power a European digital sovereign effort," the letter urges.
This isn't the first time that concerns about US hegemony in technology have been raised. Recently, the DARE project [theregister.com] launched to develop hardware and software based on the open RISC-V architecture, backed by EuroHPC JU funding, while fears have been aired about the dominance of American-owned cloud companies [theregister.com] in the European market.
Such concerns have been heightened by recent actions, such as the suggestion that the US might cut off access to Starlink internet services [reuters.com] in Ukraine as a political bargaining strategy. Starlink owner Elon Musk later denied [businessinsider.com] that this would ever happen.
The letter notes that these issues have already been set out by the EuroStack initiative [euro-stackletter.eu], made up of many of the companies that signed the letter to EC President von der Leyen. The Register asked the European Commission to comment.
On the other side of the pond, the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA) recently published a report [ccianet.org] claiming that US companies face "substantial financial burdens" due to the European Union's digital regulations.
It says that US tech companies are losing "billions" through having to comply with regulations such as the Digital Markets Act (DMA), and having to obtain user consent for their data to be used for advertising purposes.