Democratic governments have ceded significant authority to a handful of technology giants, allowing private firms to manage functions once reserved for public institutions. While the EU has pioneered a rules-based approach through the GDPR, the Digital Services Act, and the AI Act, these safeguards face mounting pressure. Critics often argue that such regulations stifle innovation, yet abandoning these standards would only deepen a reliance on foreign interests that do not necessarily align with European democratic priorities.
The vulnerability of this position was highlighted when the US government restricted access to Anthropic’s advanced AI models, Mythos 5 and Fable 5, for non-US citizens. Such decisions demonstrate how quickly strategic access to critical technology can be curtailed, leaving the European economy exposed. To counter this, the focus must shift from oversight to investment. Developing European semiconductors, sovereign cloud capabilities, and homegrown artificial intelligence is no longer optional; it is a fundamental requirement for stability.

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