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France this week moved to phase out US videoconferencing services in its public administration, ordering 2.5 million civil servants to replace Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Webex and GoTo Meeting with a homegrown platform called Visio by 2027.
The decision is the most concrete instance of a broader European push — prompted in part by increasingly confrontational rhetoric from US President Donald Trump and earlier US sanctions affecting international bodies — to reduce dependence on non‑European cloud, software and platform providers.
EU officials say the bloc relies on foreign suppliers for more than 80% of digital products and services and plan a package on “tech sovereignty” covering cloud, AI and semiconductors in March.
Other signposts include Germany’s Schleswig‑Holstein migrating away from Microsoft to open‑source tools, Austrian military moves to free software, and Franco‑German initiatives on sovereign cloud and AI. Policymakers and industry warn that replacing entrenched US services will be costly and technically challenging, and that Europe currently lacks cloud and chip capacity at the scale of US providers, even as sovereign cloud offerings and European vendors seek to expand.
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