Tuesday, December 3, 2024

European tech CEOs urge ‘Europe-first’ mentality to counter U.S. dominance after Trump victory


Thomas Plantenga, CEO of used fashion resale app Vinted, on center stage during Web Summit 2024 in Lisbon, Portugal.

Harry Murphy | Sportsfile for Web Summit Getty Images

LISBON, Portugal — Tech CEOs in Europe are urging the region and all countries to take bolder action to tackle Big Tech’s dominance and counter reliance on the US for critical technologies like artificial intelligence after Donald Trump’s electoral win.

The Republican politician’s victory was a key topic on various prominent tech bosses’ lips at the Web Summit conference in Lisbon, Portugal. Many said they’re unsure of what to expect from the president-elect, citing unpredictability around what he’ll do in office as a core challenge currently.

Andy Yen, CEO of Swiss VPN developer Proton, thinks Europe should adopt a more “Europe-first” approach to technology — in part to reverse the trend of the last two decades where much of the Western world’s most important technologies, from web browsing to smartphones, have become dominated by a handful of large US tech firms.

VPNs, or virtual private networks, are services that encrypt data and mask a user’s IP address to hide browsing activity and bypass censorship.

“It’s time for Europe to step up,” Yen told CNBC on the sidelines of Web Summit. “It’s time to be bold. It’s time to be more aggressive. And the time is now because we now have a leader in the US that is America-first, so I think our European leaders should be Europe-first.”

One key push for the past decade from the European Union has been taking legal actions and introducing tough new regulations to tackle the dominance of large technology players, such as Google, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta.

With Trump set to come into power, there is a fear that Europe might reel in its tough approach to tech giants out of fear of retaliation from the new administration. The Digital Markets Act, for example, is a landmark EU regulation targeting tech giants’ market dominance.

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Ecosia recently partnered with fellow search provider Qwant on a joint venture aimed at building a European search index to reduce their dependence on US Big Tech to serve users’ web browsing results.

The European Union’s AI Act, a landmark artificial intelligence law with global implications, introduces new transparency requirements and restrictions on both companies developing and using AI.

The laws are likely to have a big impact on predominantly US tech firms, since they’re the ones doing much of the development of — and investment in — AI.

With Trump set to come into power, it’s unclear what that could mean for the global AI regulatory landscape.

Shelley McKinley, chief legal officer of GitHub, said she doesn’t have a “crystal ball” to know what Trump might do — but in the meantime, businesses are planning for a range of different scenarios.

“We will learn in the next few months what President-elect Trump will say and in January we will start seeing some of what President Trump does in this area,” McKinley said in a CNBC-moderated panel earlier this week.

GitHub, which is owned by Microsoft, is a code repository platform popular with open-source software programmers.

“I do think it is important that we all as society, as businesses, as people continue to think about the different scenarios,” McKinley added. “I think, as with any political change, as with any world change, we’re still all thinking about what are all of the scenarios we might operate in.”



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