Tech companies, and the EU today imports 80% of its digital technology. In September 2024, the Draghi Report issued a stark warning to bloc leaders, (…) Strong measures from the White House in retaliation for European antitrust and regulatory enforcement might just give this process additional impetus. President Trump cannot make European tech great again, because it never was great. But his policies may unintentionally help make it so.
Doubt it. EU is a centrally planned economy, which is antithetical to innovation. The mechanisms they employ (high taxes on every company, then subsidies for select large employers with established lobbying interest), makes sure that novel ideas are better of elsewhere.
We’ve always shown preference for a slowed decline, rather than having to adapt to a changing world.
EU has been for a long time investing in innovation and supporting open source development. Lemmy for one is partially funded by EU funds…
The issue is an economic centrism which dominates the EU governance so while there are plenty EU supported and developed alternatives they are not used. But as much as hate LLMs it seems that was the push required for EU to reconsider their approach. Combine that with the friends turning into foes and the future tech sector in the EU looks bright.
EU has been for a long time investing in innovation
Small copies of existing technologies aren’t novelty nor innovation.
while there are plenty EU supported and developed alternatives they are not used.
Exactly why novelty and innovation is needed, instead of imitation. No need to move buyers from the original to the alternative, if you’re the original.
Small copies of existing technologies aren’t novelty nor innovation.
Well, this just shows your ignorance on the subject. The biggest irony is that you probably don’t even know when you use some EU innovation since they aggressively promote open research, so it’s not hiding behind a patent to be abused to by a single greedy corporation…
Doubt it. EU is a centrally planned economy, which is antithetical to innovation. The mechanisms they employ (high taxes on every company, then subsidies for select large employers with established lobbying interest), makes sure that novel ideas are better of elsewhere.
We’ve always shown preference for a slowed decline, rather than having to adapt to a changing world.
EU has been for a long time investing in innovation and supporting open source development. Lemmy for one is partially funded by EU funds…
The issue is an economic centrism which dominates the EU governance so while there are plenty EU supported and developed alternatives they are not used. But as much as hate LLMs it seems that was the push required for EU to reconsider their approach. Combine that with the friends turning into foes and the future tech sector in the EU looks bright.
Small copies of existing technologies aren’t novelty nor innovation.
Exactly why novelty and innovation is needed, instead of imitation. No need to move buyers from the original to the alternative, if you’re the original.
Well, this just shows your ignorance on the subject. The biggest irony is that you probably don’t even know when you use some EU innovation since they aggressively promote open research, so it’s not hiding behind a patent to be abused to by a single greedy corporation…
I work in the sector. I see very little EU products, because there aren’t many. Just like the linked article, and draghi’s report show.