Of course not! just find viable alternatives to Microsoft, Apple, Mozilla, YCombinator, Google, Intel, AMD, ...
In all seriousness, as an American I'd love to see a healthier, more well-distributed tech industry, but I don't see many companies stepping up to provide competing services. It's my understanding that china has alternatives to many of these products/services, but I really don't see how anyone in Europe could possibly use a US-free internet.
> but I don't see many companies stepping up to provide competing services
Maybe because the US dropped most of its anti trust regulations, leading to ridiculously monopolistic practices such as "acquire everything that may be threatening".
When was the last time you heard about a European cellphone manufacturer, or social media network, or web browser being acquired by an American monopoly?
I can only think of Nokia, purchased by microsoft in 2014. Those phones ran windows CE before that even, so you could hardly have avoided the american tech industry.
All I'm trying to say is, it's impossible for Europeans to both A) be on the internet and B) avoid the US tech industry.
In the EU there is the threat of jail time if a user of your service does something bad and you haven't completed the necessary bureaucracy to be immune to it. This is the opposite of the US. See for example pissmail.
that's why the world need to wake up. With the due respect of any political beliefs here, in the course of politics any country can be deemed the US enemy (or any other country's enemy as a matter of fact), so for example firing the 3/4 of the company because we have Claude and ChatGPT (US based) is a major business continuation flaw...
Of course not! just find viable alternatives to Microsoft, Apple, Mozilla, YCombinator, Google, Intel, AMD, ...
In all seriousness, as an American I'd love to see a healthier, more well-distributed tech industry, but I don't see many companies stepping up to provide competing services. It's my understanding that china has alternatives to many of these products/services, but I really don't see how anyone in Europe could possibly use a US-free internet.
> but I don't see many companies stepping up to provide competing services
Maybe because the US dropped most of its anti trust regulations, leading to ridiculously monopolistic practices such as "acquire everything that may be threatening".
When was the last time you heard about a European cellphone manufacturer, or social media network, or web browser being acquired by an American monopoly?
I can only think of Nokia, purchased by microsoft in 2014. Those phones ran windows CE before that even, so you could hardly have avoided the american tech industry.
All I'm trying to say is, it's impossible for Europeans to both A) be on the internet and B) avoid the US tech industry.
In the EU there is the threat of jail time if a user of your service does something bad and you haven't completed the necessary bureaucracy to be immune to it. This is the opposite of the US. See for example pissmail.
Nokia phones ran mostly on SymbianOS
Sorry, I stand corrected
that's why the world need to wake up. With the due respect of any political beliefs here, in the course of politics any country can be deemed the US enemy (or any other country's enemy as a matter of fact), so for example firing the 3/4 of the company because we have Claude and ChatGPT (US based) is a major business continuation flaw...