European Tech Sovereignty
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
The European Union reveals details of its tech sovereignty package
The European Union reveals details of its tech sovereignty package New proposals will see the EU further invest in European startups and companies as it looks to strengthen its homegrown tech footprint. The European Commission has announced a new European Technological Sovereignty Package, designed to further reduce its reliance on foreign tech. The EU wants to focus on building out Europe's capacity in areas such as semiconductors, AI, cloud computing and open-source projects.
Communication on European Tech Sovereignty, and an EU Open-Source Strategy
The Commission is putting forward a multi-pronged, comprehensive strategy to achieve technological sovereignty, with initiatives that are interconnected and mutually reinforcing across each stage of the value chain, from chips, to infrastructure, to software, cloud and AI, and in synergy with past and ongoing initiatives such as AI Factories and AI Gigafactories. This is reflected in four initiatives: - The Chips Act 2.0 to strengthen the semiconductor ecosystem and supply chain resilience,...
Europe unveils tech sovereignty package amid growing concerns over reliance on U.S. tech
The European Commission on Wednesday proposed a slew of new rules intended to bolster homegrown chips, AI and cloud services as the bloc scrambles to develop tech sovereignty amid huge reliance on products and services from the U.S. and China. The proposals, which must be approved by all 27 member states, include new actions to bolster advanced chip manufacturing and homegrown cloud computing. As geopolitical tensions across the globe have ramped up, there have been growing calls for Europe...
EU Parliament to switch to French search engine from Google in tech sovereignty push
EU Parliament to switch to French search engine from Google in tech sovereignty push BRUSSELS, June 3 : The European Parliament will switch to French search engine Qwant from Google, it said on Wednesday, underscoring Europe's push to reduce its reliance on U.S. technology in favour of local alternatives. The European Commission will later on Wednesday announce measures on chips, cloud computing services and AI as part of its "Buy and Use European" drive. "From 4 June 2026, Qwant will become...
Can Europe own its digital destiny? EU unveils tech sovereignty roadmap
Can Europe own its digital destiny? EU unveils tech sovereignty roadmap To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement. One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading.
EU seeks to boost Europe’s chip demand in tech sovereignty bid
The EU's revamped Chips Act shifts focus from supply to demand to boost European chip demand, especially for AI. The draft law covers demand aggregation and crisis tools, as part of a broader tech sovereignty push also covering cloud services and open source.
Can Europe quit American Big Tech?
Listen on Spotify Apple Music Amazon Music The European Commission has finally unveiled its long-awaited tech sovereignty package — a push to make Europe less dependent on foreign technology after years of relying on U.S. cloud services, chips, AI infrastructure and digital tools. Sarah Wheaton is joined by former MEP Marietje Schaake, author of The Tech Coup and POLITICO’s Laurens Cerulus to ask what happens when the systems running Europe’s schools, ministries, banks, businesses and...
Europe raises 'Kill Switch' fears, makes all 27 countries to junk US, Chinese tech
The European Commission has proposed a sweeping new set of regulations, approved by its 27 member states, to abandon their reliance on American and Chinese technology. The push for "tech sovereignty" comes amid warnings that a foreign power could weaponise critical digital infrastructure against the countries in the region. According to a report by CNBC, the proposals specifically target advanced microchips, artificial intelligence (AI), and cloud services -- which are essentially the...
The European Parliament may be ditching Google as its default search engine
The European Parliament may be ditching Google as its default search engine EU officials are trying to decrease the bloc's dependency on foreign tech. European legislators are taking another step away from relying on American tech. The European Parliament will reportedly stop using Google as the default search engine on its in-house computers.
Newsletter: The quest for the EU’s tech independence
Also in this newsletter: The EU's sanctions envoy David O'Sullivan says the bloc should be willing to take “unilateral action” against China's facilitation of Russian sanctions evasion; and why Italy is expected to be criticised by Brussels for its intervention in response to the energy crisis. Good morning from Brussels. This is Mared Gwyn with a packed newsletter to kick off your Wednesday.