20 comments

  • petcat an hour ago

    > However, stopping working with Microsoft and other US tech companies is not an option in the short term, he told the magazine.

    > Van der Burg is currently grappling with the issue of Solvinity, a Dutch cloud service provider which is widely used by government departments including the Digid identity system, and which is on the verge of being sold to a US company.

    > The Dutch tax office is also currently switching to Microsoft systems, despite MPs’ concerns.

    They all talk about the importance of European digital sovereignty and then continue to do the exact opposite behind the scenes.

    • microtonal an hour ago

      They all talk about the importance of European digital sovereignty and then continue to do the exact opposite behind the scenes.

      To be honest and I say this as a Dutch person, this is typical Dutch (government). Basically two rules in Dutch politics: (1) always choose the option that pleases the US the most; (2) always postpone solving issues to the latest possible moment (US dependence, nitrogen deposition, childcare benefits scandal, gas-induced earthquakes).

      France, Germany, etc. are much better examples when it comes to sovereignty.

      As an aside the parliament wants to stop the Solvinity acquisition or stop renewing the contract with Solvinity. But the VVD (one of the parties in government) is always going to choose what is best for big business (the party is one big revolving door) or the US.

      • stingraycharles a few seconds ago

        Don’t forget that they’re in the process of letting our digital government identity being managed by a US company. It’s absolutely ridiculous.

      • miohtama 28 minutes ago

        It's not only Dutch. Instead of building sovereignity, the EU thought they could regulate their way and force everyone to bend the knee because of their share as a trading partner. This started 20 years ago. However what has happened is that the EU's soft power is crumbling, but the politicians have hard to grasp with the reality they could somehow dictate things globally. AI will only further accelerate this.

        Only way to have control is to have domestic actors you can push around.

        • jorvi 19 minutes ago

          > However what has happened is that the EU's soft power is crumbling

          Uh, no. The US soft power is turning to dust whilst the EU is out there building the new free [trade] world, with itself as the biggest lynchpin.

          What has happened the past ±30 years is that most EU countries cut spending on their militaries to the bone, because big brother USA would take care of it anyway. Now that we are returning to a multi-polar world, suddenly the EU is left scrambling for hard power that it doesn't have. That's why they can't play hardball when the US does a new ridiculous thing, because they simply lack the hard power to back up Ukraine.

          The US is sorely going to regret their antics though. Long term, the EU is going to switch to their own stacks, both for military but also things like cloud and other tech. It's trillions of $ the US economy will be missing out on. And voting in a Democratic president, senate and house is not gonna change a thing about it, because the US has proven itself to be a fundamentally unreliable, if not outright hostile partner.

          • skippyboxedhero 3 minutes ago

            It is difficult to think of an economic region that is more opposed to free trade than Europe (that isn't a comedy country). Possibly some countries in South America?

            Trade within Europe has massive restrictions. I have no idea why, given the stated aims of Europe...we are posting this on a post about the Netherlands trying to protect office software ffs, people think this isn't the case. One of the reasons why the EU created a trade bloc, and the same reasons why you see the same attempts in areas of the world like South America, was to limit the impact of free trade. This should be completely obvious given that the EU is not competitive in areas where they lack the ability to limit competition.

            Also, I will point out: US policy is for the EU to do exactly the thing that you are suggesting. This has been the consistent position of Trump since 2016. The main blockers for this have been politicians in the EU. I am not sure how you equate being unreliable with subsidising EU defence spending to the tune of multiple trillions so that EU countries can spend on welfare either.

            The EU self-image is totally bizarre, it is so out of touch with reality. Hostile to all forms of change and innovation: actually one of the greatest free traders there has ever been. Xenophobic and hostile to certain countries: possibly one of the greatest allies to these countries ever. Never gets any support on Ukraine, would be a leader if the US weren't such bastards: spent multiple decades fuelling Putin's state.

      • dgellow 16 minutes ago

        > always postpone solving issues to the latest possible moment

        Germany has the exact same issue. Always looking to keep the status quo for as long as possible. It’s really a structural problem, it’s the result of the political system, elected leadership, demographics (mostly the voting population aging rapidly). I expect the same issue is shared by most Western European countries

    • pjc50 an hour ago

      Rather like pre 2022 Russia, governments get warnings that something bad is going to happen that it would be expensive to prepare for, and put off preparing because you don't get political rewards for that.

    • softwaredoug 31 minutes ago

      Ironically GOP talks about European sovereignty over their own defense, but economically want to treat them like a vassal

      • roenxi 16 minutes ago

        If you think about it in terms of game theory that is actually a fair approach - you have an ally, you propose a best-case path forward for the alliance where both members are strong. If the ally don't want to take that path then you exploit the ally instead since a technically incompetent ally is a liability who needs to be kept under tight control.

    • hulitu 8 minutes ago

      US tech companies pay well, the cost of living is increasing, so politicians have to think about the future.

    • spockz 43 minutes ago

      There are many different tracks underway in government in different branches. Completely vetoing everything to use Microsoft is a difficult decision as it also stops a lot of features that depend on it, or were made to depend on it, such as updating tax codes. Therefore it is a risk/benefit assessment rather than outright lying. (The latter also happens obviously but just wanted to state that reality is more gray than black and white.)

    • throwaw12 an hour ago

      Because there is no punishment for lying in politics.

      Look at the Trump, connected to p*dos, instead of stopping wars, started a war, betrayed MAGA, but still no action taken against him, because there is no legal action for lying to become a politican

  • KnuthIsGod a few seconds ago

    Europeans are virtually serfs of the US.

  • Eridrus 30 minutes ago

    I don't know what the US thinks it will gain by targeting civil servants. They are not the ones with the power to decide what happens, and retaliation would mean more anti-US people selecting themselves into these projects.

    • jgalt212 3 minutes ago

      Yes, civil servants should be allowed to ply their trade without scrutiny.

    • emilfihlman 27 minutes ago

      >They are not the ones with the power to decide what happens

      This is a very naive interpretation. Bureaucrats have MASSIVE amount of power and control, and in actuality decide many things and how the law is written.

    • miohtama 23 minutes ago

      These civil servants are effectively trying to bypass the US court. These civil servants yield considerable power what comes to the censorship, and the Whitehouse really really hates the idea that the EU can decide, not them, what is allowed. This will send a message that the US stands behind its companies and is not push around. If you want to push non-domestic enforcement, you need to be willing to stand behind the principles and be publicly ready to defend the censorship rulings you set forward.

      • pjc50 14 minutes ago

        > Whitehouse really really hates the idea that the EU can decide, not them, what is allowed

        .. in the Netherlands. Where the EU and the Dutch government get to decide what happens. That's what national sovereignty means.

  • emilfihlman 25 minutes ago

    Civil servant's info is public information (at least in Finland it is).

    It's good that bureaucrats can't hide behind bureaucracy.