Teams | Collaboration | Customer Service | Project Management

Digital Sovereignty in 2025: Why It Matters for European Enterprises

In the new digital economy, data is power. Questions about who controls, processes, and protects it now sit at the center of political and corporate priorities. The year 2025 marks a turning point in Europe’s pursuit of digital sovereignty, driven by tighter regulation and growing geopolitical tension. For enterprises within the EU, digital sovereignty has become a strategic requirement for sustainable growth in an increasingly regulated environment.

What Is Cloud Sovereignty? A Guide for European Enterprises

US based hyperscalers continue to dominate digital infrastructure worldwide. Yet across Europe, there is a growing movement to protect data from both cyber threats and extraterritorial laws, and to ensure full regulatory compliance. Cloud sovereignty has become a cornerstone of this effort. Cloud sovereignty ensures that data, workloads, operations, and digital infrastructure remain under the jurisdictional control of the country or region where they reside. It goes beyond simple data residency.

Unbundling Dependence: Why the EU's Teams Breakup Is a Broader WakeUp Call

Microsoft’s forced unbundling of Teams in the EU is more than an antitrust event. It's a reminder that enterprises must carefully deconstruct how they build dependence on platforms that mix sensitive and non-sensitive workloads, especially those outside sovereign control. The key lesson: separating sensitive from public-facing communications, and sovereign from non-sovereign platforms, is now a strategic imperative.

When Compliance Comes Late: Why Microsoft's EU Deal Shows That Non-Compliance Still Pays Off

The Commission’s compliance is not just a Microsoft win—it’s a signal to all European institutions and businesses. To meet EU rules, the Commission had to enforce strict limits on data transfers, improve contractual safeguards, and guarantee that data processing takes place within the European Economic Area wherever possible.

A Talk with XWiki on the Importance of Open Source in Digital Sovereignty

Open source is becoming central to Europe’s digital strategy as organizations look for alternatives that respect privacy and sovereignty. XWiki and CryptPad are not new names in the European tech space. Both are open source platforms with roots going back over 20 years. Headquartered in Paris, the company behind them has grown from community-driven projects into widely used tools across industries and governments.

Why ChatControl is Doomed to Failure. Or Worse.

The goal of the ChatControl proposal is to detect any online material within messaging communications that indicates evidence of abuse, otherwise known as CSAM. EU legislation—Directive 2011/93/EU—defines CSAM, requiring member states to criminalize: It also requires the removal of CSAM websites hosted in the EU, and cooperation with international partners when hosted abroad. There is no controversy about the value of stopping these criminal behaviors.

ChatControl: An Invasion of Our Digital Living Spaces

That notion of digital space is no less true for everyone’s personal lives. Billions of people spend a significant portion of their time in an extended digital living space. We chat and message with our friends and relatives. We call and videoconference together. We share files, images, videos, and even collaborate on joint projects online. We play games together, watch videos together, and do so many collaborative things online.