Carrez explained: “We’ve seen old alliances between the US and the EU being questioned or leveraged for immediate gains. We have seen the very terms of exchange of goods changing almost every day. And as a response to that, in Europe, we’re moving to digital sovereignty.” That shift, in turn, means open-source software.

“The world needs sovereign, high-performance and sustainable infrastructure,” continued Carrez, “that remains interoperable and secure, while collaborating tightly with AI, containers and trusted execution environments. Open infrastructure allows nations and organizations to maintain control over their applications, their data, and their destiny while benefiting from global collaboration.”

  • Melobol@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    Respect if this really happens.
    I do not see a reason why other countries would need to buy US products, and open source is always nicer to non English speaking countries.
    This also could bring a lot of innovation to the software market. But it’s not easy, and I just hope for the best.