Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 0:41:59 GMT -5
The issue of digital sovereignty is forcefully imposing itself in Europe, especially due to the continuous tensions between the USA and China over technological supremacy. It is in this general framework that Europe must regain technological sovereignty by creating an autonomous system of European clouds to manage and store all industrial data without resorting to data centers of American and Chinese companies such as Google, Amazon or Alibaba. Computing power, control of our data and secure connectivity: the 3 pillars on which we need to work. Operation already underway thanks to the launch of Gaia-X, a European cloud computing platform born on the Franco-German axis and promoted by 22 companies.
Content index: Europe's digital sovereignty The Gaia-X project Europe's digital Chinese Student Phone Number List sovereignty Defining the 3 pillars of computing power, control of our data and secure connectivity is the first step to start developing the so-called digital sovereignty thanks to new rules and laws specifically launched, such as the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). According to research conducted by the European Council on foreign relations, growing tensions between China and the US are an incentive for Europe to develop its digital capabilities and to adopt a common position on many technological issues, such as the introduction of broadband or the application of artificial intelligence.
In this context, Europe considers it increasingly appropriate to equip itself with an autonomous European cloud system to ensure that companies' industrial data are not subject to the laws of third countries, external to the European ecosystem. The German Economy Minister, Peter Altmaier, also spoke out about the need to create a European infrastructure system that competes with the big ones from the United States and China, declaring that Data will become the most important raw material of the future. Germany and Europe need an infrastructure that guarantees us sovereignty over them. To date, data represents the real strategic resource for the digitalisation of the economy and for Europe's digital sovereignty. The Gaia-X project The Franco-German project, born in 2018 and officially presented on 4 June 2019 at the joint press conference by the Economy Ministers of Berlin Peter Altmaier and Paris Bruno Lemaire, involving 22 companies including SAP, Bosch, OVHCloud and Siemens.
Content index: Europe's digital sovereignty The Gaia-X project Europe's digital Chinese Student Phone Number List sovereignty Defining the 3 pillars of computing power, control of our data and secure connectivity is the first step to start developing the so-called digital sovereignty thanks to new rules and laws specifically launched, such as the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). According to research conducted by the European Council on foreign relations, growing tensions between China and the US are an incentive for Europe to develop its digital capabilities and to adopt a common position on many technological issues, such as the introduction of broadband or the application of artificial intelligence.
In this context, Europe considers it increasingly appropriate to equip itself with an autonomous European cloud system to ensure that companies' industrial data are not subject to the laws of third countries, external to the European ecosystem. The German Economy Minister, Peter Altmaier, also spoke out about the need to create a European infrastructure system that competes with the big ones from the United States and China, declaring that Data will become the most important raw material of the future. Germany and Europe need an infrastructure that guarantees us sovereignty over them. To date, data represents the real strategic resource for the digitalisation of the economy and for Europe's digital sovereignty. The Gaia-X project The Franco-German project, born in 2018 and officially presented on 4 June 2019 at the joint press conference by the Economy Ministers of Berlin Peter Altmaier and Paris Bruno Lemaire, involving 22 companies including SAP, Bosch, OVHCloud and Siemens.