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Enterprise – Silicon Republic

Transport for London hackers jailed for five and a half years Commission refers Ireland to CJEU for failing to enact cyber rules Cloudflare to block AI crawlers from ad-supported webpages by default Google ordered to pay Klarna nearly $2bn in abuse-of-power row Upcoming iPhone 18 model leaked in Tata Electronics hack Data breaches going unreported – Irish compliance survey Cybersecurity warning for Irish businesses ahead of EU Presidency Dublin's TensorX to partner with Solstice on sovereign European AI Irish Internet Hotline named Trusted Flagger under EU Digital Services Act Don't panic, prepare: A cyber expert's advice on the Mythos hype Day-to-day cyber incidents driving loss for SMEs, finds report Anthropic to reassess Claude Fable 5 AI development restrictions after backlash Anthropic rolls out ‘Mythos-like’ AI model Claude Fable 5 EMEA firms underestimating 'routine risks', finds cyber report More than 20,000 Instagram accounts hacked using Meta AI bug Report: Irish firms cut cybersecurity spend despite rising risks TCS launches sovereign cloud offering in Europe ECB urging action on AI from lenders’ IT departments Hackers access GitHub, download codebase in Grafana Labs breach Europe's public sector deploying AI faster than it can manage – report UK watchdog probes Microsoft over interoperability issues Foxconn confirms cyberattack on North American facilities Clear gap between AI expectations and preparedness, finds report Canvas parent settles with hacker group that stole user data ShinyHunters demands ransom after Canvas hack EU agrees to simpler AI rules and complete ‘nudification’ ban What’s the difference between IT and OT security? Opinion: Why ISO 27001 alone won't save your data from itself Report: Medical device cyberattacks on the rise AI race intensifies with Google's new agent management platform Anthropic probing reported Mythos leak on Discord Nearly 75pc of AI’s economic value captured by just 20pc of companies Anthropic’s Mythos to bolster cybersecurity at UK banks The death of ETL: Is zero-copy a ‘liberation’ for data teams? After Anthropic, OpenAI launches cyber-specific AI model The Interview: Dentons' Carlo Salizzo on three forces defining digital law Anthropic's Mythos a game-changer, NCSC chief tells Oireachtas Mythos just first of power models to come: Anthropic co-founder New XP95 hacker group targets Dublin recruitment platform Healthdaq OpenAI apps for MacOS exposed by threat Mythos testing begins as governments raise cyber concerns Anthropic's Glasswing project employs Mythos to prevent AI cyberattacks Is your data integrity framework just a fancy spreadsheet? Ireland begins digital wallet testing and consultation How is Australia working to make data centres more sustainable? China's DeepSeek suffers rare outage lasting several hours ShinyHunters claims responsibility for European Commission breach Security first: Why cybersecurity needs to adapt in the age of AI iOS hacking tool 'DarkSword' leaked on GitHub China’s Alibaba could launch Qwen for enterprise this week Stryker's Cork site hit by global cyberattack How fully homomorphic encryption is reshaping secure AI Major phishing operation disrupted in joint Europol action Hacking tool with possible US origins targets outdated iPhones Pure Storage, now Everpure, to acquire 1touch Hacker used commercial AI to breach 600 firewalls: AWS Why cloud strategies are pivoting from reaction to precision ‘Complexity is where cyber risk tends to grow’ ‘In cyber, bridging the gap between the server room and boardroom is crucial’ AWS expanding in Belgium, Netherlands and Portugal, amid sovereign cloud launch
Office.eu and the hope for a digitally sovereign Europe
Suhasini Srinivasaragavan · 2026-03-10 · via Enterprise – Silicon Republic

Expert says alternatives to Microsoft and Google productivity tools are not seeing much buying interest.

Much has happened over the past few years for Europe to decide to tighten its reigns on data in the region.

Examples include numerous comments from US president Donald Trump threatening action against the EU for its supposed discriminatory actions against US Big Tech, the possibility of the US government compelling US tech companies to share EU data, and not to mention the very same Big Tech companies dominating the region’s market while also violating its laws.

Microsoft 365 was found to have been tracking EU school students’ data illegally, Apple was found to be preventing EU users from exercising choice, and Meta was forcing users to pay or consent to its data tracking.

Last November, around 900 policymakers and other stakeholders gathered in Berlin to discuss ways to make Europe more technologically resilient, and less dependent on the US.

France and Germany took centre stage, announcing a joint taskforce on digital sovereignty, aiming for a more competitive and sovereign Europe.

“The Digital Sovereignty Summit sends a clear signal – Europe has what it takes to lead the digital age,” commented French president Emmanuel Macron at the time. “Europe is stepping up to accelerate the development of European innovation, to uphold strong data protection and to call for fair market conditions.”

The idea of digital sovereignty has finally taken centre stage in Europe, after years of the region conducting its business and administration on infrastructure made elsewhere.

It’s unsurprising then that a wholly European-owned alternative to Microsoft Office and Google Workspace, called Office.eu, made its debut last week, promising to enable organisations to regain control over their data and digital operations.

“We have seen more and more how essential it is to become cloud-independent and to rely on software that is built around European values,” said Maarten Roelfs, the CEO of Office.eu. The Hague-headquartered company was founded in 2024 and started operating early this year.

“For many years, Europe has relied on American software and therefore created a certain risk of dependency, but we have also given away the control over our own data. Office.eu proves that we now have a strong European alternative, with sovereignty, privacy and transparency at its core.”

Office.eu runs entirely on European data centres. Built on an open-source foundation, the platform offers a cloud drive, tools such as emails, spreadsheets, presentations and calendar, and video conference services.

Early access already has nearly 15,000 applicants, Office.eu told SiliconRepublic.com. A phased European rollout is planned for the second quarter.

Office.eu’s Office Suite is not the first of its kind, however. Infomaniak, which describes itself as an “ethical cloud with no bullshit”, launched ‘kSuite’ back in 2022, with a Microsoft Teams alternative called ‘kChat’, and the option to use Microsoft Office with documents hosted in Switzerland.

OpenDesk, created by the German Centre for Digital Sovereignty, offers similar tools for use by the German administration. There are others as well, such as NextCloud, which offers self-hosted file storage and a chat function.

“The Rubicon has been crossed. American tech firms can no longer offer assurances to European companies that their data sovereignty will be protected,” Roelfs told Stories of Purpose.

However, Forrester senior analyst Dario Maisto said that these alternatives might not see much buying interest in the near future.

“Alternatives to Microsoft and Google products are getting attention in the market for different reasons…however, there are many reasons why these alternatives may not scale in the near future.”

He explained that issues such as a lack of enterprise-grade support, feature disparities, and the need to migrate into a new suite might all contribute to these alternatives not gaining traction.

Plus, vendors such Microsoft and Google are developing more sovereign alternatives of their offerings exactly to cater to new sovereign needs of their international clients, he added.

“If anything, the presence of alternatives is pushing Google and Microsoft to do more on the sovereignty front, but at the moment does not represent a true challenge for their market positioning.”

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Updated, 09:13 am, 11 March 2026: This article has been updated with comments from Forrester senior analyst Dario Maisto.