EU Pursues ‘Digital Divorce’ from U.S. Technology Over Security Risks: A Love Story That Was Always a Little Too Convenient
There’s something almost poetic about the European Union deciding it’s time to “digitally separate” from American technology. Not poetic in the romantic sense—more like the kind of poetry you scribble in a notebook at 2 a.m. after realizing your partner has been reading your messages, tracking your location, and monetizing your emotional instability. The EU isn’t exactly packing its bags overnight, but the tone has shifted. What used to be a mildly passive-aggressive relationship—think regulatory side-eye and the occasional billion-euro fine—has evolved into something more serious. Something with paperwork. Something with phrases like “strategic autonomy” and “data sovereignty.” Translation: Europe is starting to think maybe, just maybe, letting a handful of Silicon Valley giants handle the continent’s data, infrastructure, communications, and digital economy wasn’t the most future-proof decision. And honestly? It’s about time. The Relationship Timeline: From Infatuation to Exist...