Do we want tech giants, though?
Szewek
If people would watch more Arte and Mubi the world would be a much better place, regardless of (or, in addition to) the changes money flows and personal data usage.
About Mistral:
Critically, Mistral Compute aims to provide a competitive edge to entire industries and countries in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and the entire Southern Hemisphere that have been waiting for an alternative to US or China-based cloud and AI providers. This applies equally to the global entities of US or Chinese companies that want to serve international customers, particularly in Europe, with AI that is operating and running regionally.
Nope. Your feddit is not. The EU cloud services are listed here (and others) are not. Tuta is not.
I don't think any of the alternatives listed here use AWS/Azure/GCP. I did not check the search engines, music streaming, mubi.com, and Collabora.
The only thing I found is that OnlyOffice allows to connect to GCP and AWS (you need to enable it on your own): https://helpcenter.onlyoffice.com/workspace/administration/control-panel-storage.aspx
And Mistral is available on AWS, Azure, GCP, but that's because it is an "open-source" LLM ¯_(ツ)_/¯
It seems to be complicated (surprise, EU law is complicated). I found this article about agreements with Mercosur and Canada. In the latter case, it seems ratification is peneding - it should be ratified by all EU states. But most of the deal with Canada is in place and working, as it has been "provisionally applied".
From European Comission's website
Between signing and ratifying the deal, parts of the agreement can be 'provisionally applied' – put into effect before ratification – if the Council decides to do so.
Provisional application usually only takes effect once the European Parliament has given its consent.
https://policy.trade.ec.europa.eu/eu-trade-relationships-country-and-region/making-trade-policy_en
Sources are conflicting on this one, so i throw it up. EU Made Simple agrees with you, but BBC writes that specific countries need to accept the agreement. We need an expert in EU law (and this is a very high qualification...)
The political agreement of 27 July 2025 is not legally binding. Beyond taking the immediate actions committed, the EU and the US will further negotiate, in line with their relevant internal procedures, to fully implement the political agreement.
Let's see what happens next. The member states need to agree, right?
Oh, that's gonna be a shitshow. I blame the "EU Made Simple" channel for saying veto is not needed. But BBC also says the approval is needed, and it just makes more sense. My knowledge in law is insufficient to confirm.
I don't think they can veto a trade deal
Got it. But China did it one year before the end of the term, much smarter...
Yes, and Blik also has a contactless option which you can use instead of a card for in-person purchases!