The EU is trying to turn digital rule-making into industrial power, where AI capacity, semiconductor resilience, and investment depth matter as much as regulation.
The EU is moving cloud, AI, and semiconductors into the same policy frame, but the harder question is whether new rules will build capacity or mostly reward the players already closest to scale.
The EU’s new sovereignty package is less about symbolism than control: who makes the hardware, who runs the cloud, and who can keep critical systems online when supply chains or geopolitics shift.
A warning from Finland’s security leadership highlights a hard truth in cyber defense: dependence on foreign software and hardware can turn procurement choices into national-security risk.
Europe’s bold move to reclaim its digital destiny exposes both technical ambition and political paradox.
A majority of Europeans now see a U.S.-imposed digital blackout as a real threat, fueling urgent calls for tech independence.
As geopolitical tensions rise, the EU races to reclaim control over its technological destiny-across green tech, defense, deep tech, and the final frontier of space.
Europe’s real power lies not in isolation, but in mastering the rules of digital interdependence.
The European Parliament wants to shift the balance of digital power-using public contracts as a weapon against tech dependency.
As Europe eyes tech sovereignty, the continent grapples with power, privacy, and the pursuit of control over its digital destiny.