Fonte: https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/ft-on-european-cloud/

Contenuto:

Europe is experiencing a crisis of digital autonomy. Our dependence on US big 
tech has been growing for decades and is now nearly total, at a time when 
worries about our former ally are no longer theoretical. Might we, like the 
[International Criminal Court in The Hague, find ourselves locked out of our 
own 
mailboxes](https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/31/international_criminal_court_ditches_office/)
 if we say something that is [upsetting to the US 
government](https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-threatens-new-icc-sanctions-unless-court-pledges-not-prosecute-trump-2025-12-10/)?

> This post was written in response to [an article in the Financial 
> Times](https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/fb9e9503-759d-4599-9db3-b908cf3f2a76).
>  Despite the [highly encouraging words on the FT website urging us to send in 
> articles](https://www.ft.com/content/e3e8ff2b-95c7-48f8-9eda-312494422e10), 
> this submission only received an automated reply. So then here in slightly 
> adjusted form:

Upper management of most governments and companies in Europe are fundamentally 
non-technical, and make IT policy decisions based on input from consultants and 
industry-provided and -infused professionals. And these are telling them that 
the three big US cloud providers (Amazon, Microsoft and Google) are the only 
game in town.

This leads to curious statements like [recently in the 
FT](https://www.ft.com/content/854fcad0-0d39-438b-975b-adf9d8b89827) from the 
director of the Centre for Cybersecurity Belgium (CCB) that it is “currently 
impossible to store data fully in Europe because US companies dominate digital 
infrastructure [..] If I want my information 100 per cent in the EU, keep on 
dreaming”.

Yet, many of the excellent employees of CCB (whom I encounter at conferences) 
would be able to do that after only a single visit to a local computer store. 
Their director apparently does not know this.

> The FT article otherwise makes some good points, by the way!

If one has taken as an axiom that only the big three US cloud service providers 
can do computing, it easily follows that Europe plays no role anymore.

Yet, this premise is not true - many large scale IT systems [do not in fact run 
on special US cloud 
services](https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/our-self-inflicted-cloud-crisis/). 
They run on local computers, computers that can be rented (or even bought) 
anywhere. Up until maybe five years ago, it was still highly controversial [to 
marry tax systems to proprietary foreign cloud 
services](https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/beware-cloud-is-part-of-the-software/),
 so we didn’t do it (back then).

The director of the CCB is not alone in not realizing what is (im)possible. 
Recently the Dutch government decided to move all documents and email from the 
tax agency to the Microsoft cloud because [they saw no 
alternative](https://ioplus.nl/en/posts/dutch-tax-authorities-opt-for-microsoft-for-email-and-calendar-).
 They admitted that this means our tax operations [will now become vulnerable 
to sanctions, and that the US grants itself legal access to our 
data](https://berthub.eu/tkconv/document.html?nummer=2025D52688#:~:text=De%20drie%20genoemde%20wettelijke%20instrumenten%20maken%20het).
 Since Microsoft’s [July admission in the French 
senate](https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/our-self-inflicted-cloud-crisis/#:~:text=Microsoft%20has%20just%20admitted),
 we know that European data on Microsoft servers, even those physically in 
Europe, can be accessed by US agencies.

Until quite recently, companies and governments were able to control their own 
data on local servers. The IT people that did that have not vanished, they and 
their skills are still around. Top leadership, lacking technical expertise, 
however has allowed itself to become fully indoctrinated that nothing other 
than US clouds is acceptable or even possible.

When confronted with these unacceptable realities, decision makers will often 
say they’ll look into changing this situation once a European place delivers 
exactly the functionality currently procured from the US. This could be a long 
wait since it is not easy to recreate the American experience without any 
customers, who admit they are only going to engage once parity has been 
achieved. And likely not then either - companies also find it nearly impossible 
to switch between US cloud service providers!

It is always a risk to get too deeply in bed with specific vendors, especially 
for unwieldy large systems. Luckily, it is also possible to base services on 
generic compute, storage and network capacity, something we have [amply 
available in 
Europe](https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/the-european-cloud-ladder/). 
Cloud-based experts may say this is hard, but I run a popular [parliamentary 
monitoring system entirely on a single non-cloud server](https://opentk.nl). It 
hosts all parliamentary documents since 2008. If I can do this, governments 
could relearn to do it as well.

This would not only liberate us from US tech hegemony. Using non-proprietary 
technologies would also ensure we do not get tied to any specific proprietary 
cloud provider, which would then end up as a mandatory partner to run vital 
systems [for the next few 
decades](https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/beware-cloud-is-part-of-the-software/).

To get any progress, two things are needed. Leadership within enterprise and 
government needs to skill up and grasp the digital realities, and not only 
parrot wisdom from a consulting industry that itself fully believes only in US 
clouds. And secondly, with that newfound understanding, large scale IT 
operators should reengage with the generic IT capabilities that do exist in 
Europe, and that until a few years ago were able to run things like our tax 
agencies.

This is vital since if upper management continues to wait until Europe’s 
industry recreates the US offerings, while declaring nothing else is possble, 
Europe will indeed continue as a digital colony of the US. This at a time when 
the consequences of [accepting such utter dependence could be 
terrible](https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/cyber-security-pre-war-reality-check/).

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