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The Register - Off-Prem: PaaS + IaaS

AWS lets agents drive its virtual cloudy desktops Trump threatens UK with ‘big tariff’ over digital tech tax UK tribunal sends £2B claim accusing Microsoft of overcharging for licensing to trial £2B Microsoft licensing claim gets go-ahead from UK tribunal One of Europe's sovereign cloud picks may not be so-sovereign after all Europe picks 4 sovereign cloud providers, but one has Google Networks not ready for the challenges of AI traffic UK told its Big Tech habit is now a national security risk Commvault has a Ctrl+Z for rogue AI agents Amazon rejects AWS climate disclosure proposal Microsoft cuts cloudy desktop prices by 20 percent Google taps Intel for another round of custom network chips Nutanix thinks some Azure cloud desktops belong on-prem AWS would prefer to forget March in UAE region AWS would prefer to forget March in UAE region CMA dithers as Microsoft's cloud meter runs on your dime Microsoft startup credits are the gift that keeps on billing SAP's grand cloud escape plan €2B short of the runway Alibaba Cloud hikes prices by up to 34%, blames hardware costs and AI demand Alibaba Cloud lifts prices, blames AI and hardware costs Founder finds Azure startup credits don't apply to Claude Lloyds Banking Group apps play mix-and-match with customer transactions Oracle outage knocks TikTok offline for some US users Oracle outage knocks TikTok offline for some US users Bank of England says it can run £431M settlement system without Accenture AWS says drones hit two of its datacenters in UAE, urges users to move resources to different regions AWS says drones hit two of its datacenters in UAE Salesforce CEO 'SaaSquatch' Benioff says his company will monster the SaaSpocalypse Salesforce CEO declared victory over flagging software sales Former Amazon UK boss set to chair CMA Founder drops AWS for Euro stack in bid for sovereignty Founder drops AWS for Euro stack in bid for sovereignty FTC to investigate Microsoft's cloud and AI dominance FTC to investigate Microsoft's cloud and AI dominance Oracle suits up for Air Force Cloud One program with $88M contract Europe set to treble sovereign cloud investment Europe set to treble sovereign cloud investment Courts unplug from ancient datacenters after five-year slog MEP: 'The EU runs on Microsoft', Uncle Sam could turn it off Azure outages ripple across multiple dependent services Azure outages ripple across multiple dependent services Europe shrugs off tariffs, plots to end tech reliance on US Want digital sovereignty? That'll be 1% of your GDP into AI infrastructure please Microsoft Azure OpenAI Service takes an unscheduled day off in Sweden AWS's inevitable destiny: becoming the next Lumen AWS destiny: becoming the next Lumen 3 is the magic number for Alaska Airlines: triple redundancy Microsoft 365 outage drags on for nearly 10 hours GSA's VMware framework deal skips the actual hypervisor AWS flips switch on Euro cloud as sovereignty fears mount Meta reacts to power needs by signing long-term nuke deals UK urged to cut out US Big Tech for sake of digi sovereignty AWS raises GPU prices 15% on a Saturday Europe building an Airbus for the cloud age Oracle's new AI-enhanced support portal leaves users fuming Atlassian's DR simulation showed it lived in dependency hell UK govt seeks replacement for Post Office Horizon system Public cloud spending forecast to reach $591bn in 2023 Google to review every project after $6bn decline in profits Delta Airlines takes flight with Amazon Web Services Cloud infrastructure spend to top non-cloud in 2022 HPE Greenlake to power Taeknizon expansion in UAE Google's Dallas datacenter opens up new cloud region American Airlines decides to cruise into Azure's cloud Tencent happily parting ways with loss-making cloud customers DigitalOcean offers $4 VM while increasing prices Cloud spending will near $500 billion this year Tencent Cloud ends pursuit of 'revenue growth at all costs' IaaS is a lousy business, says Chinese web giant Tencent: PaaS and SaaS is how we’ll make money in the cloud UK government puts £750m on the table as it looks to deal directly with cloud providers Cloud now bigger than Dell, HPE, Lenovo, Cisco combined McAfee says cloud security not as bad as we feared… it's much worse Oracle: Over here, look over here! At the cloud! No, not at our glum licensing numbers Oracle's Hurd says 95% of its software will be cloud services this year Pivotal fluffs up *sigh* Cloud Foundry *sigh* cloud for battle in the *sigh* cloud IBM throws open doors of XaaS supermarket Google offers up its own flesh to the world's braying cloud hordes Red Hat clutches OpenShift, takes platform cloud to second version Swish PaaS Bosh: Sons of VMware spin up Pivotal One cloud platform Google holds its nose, lets the hoi polloi run PHP on its shiny cloud Engine Yard loads Oracle tech into cloud platform Microsoft takes second run at platform cloud CYBORG CLOUD comes to VMware Amazon tightens grip on cloud market, report shows IBM pours WebSphere tech into Cloud Foundry cauldron Red Hat parachutes into crowded PaaS market Heroku publishes API for its platform cloud AppFog PaaS drops Rackspace IaaS Platform clouds can make enterprises all teeth and no tail Report: Amazon dominates global cloud spend Engine Yard plugs multiple IaaS players into back end Red Hat revs OpenShift Enterprise to 1.1 Platform clouds generating more noise than cash IBM adds platform services to SmartCloud Trevor Pott's guide to pricing up the cloud Red Hat answers Microsoft Azure with OpenShift dev cloud Infosmack tackles VMware's Cloud Foundry Why and when choose PaaS? PaaS potential and practicality The public cloud ... why bother?
Digital sovereignty isn't just a buzzword – it's the future
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols · 2026-04-13 · via The Register - Off-Prem: PaaS + IaaS

OPINION You want to know who's even sicker of President Donald Trump than American liberals? European governments and companies who are realizing that putting all their eggs in one US basket was a stupid move.

That came loud and clear last month in Amsterdam at KubeCon Europe 2026.

In the Netherlands' capital, everyone was talking about digital sovereignty. Heck, there was a sold-out Open Sovereign Cloud Day at the conference's start. It wasn't just there, though. Digital sovereignty was almost as hot a topic at the show as AI. The subject came up in the keynotes, the hallway track, and vendor booths.

Why? In a lunch interview, Thierry Carrez, general manager of Linux Foundation Europe, explained that while technologies like confidential computing can stop cloud providers from reading data by encrypting data in memory, there's no tech answer if the Trump administration insists on an American company flipping the kill switch on your email, your office software, or even access to your US-hosted data.

Carrez stressed that this risk is no longer theoretical. Back in February 2025, Trump had the Department of State impose sanctions on 11 senior members of the International Criminal Court. Microsoft, not wanting to lose billions in US government contracts, folded like a cheap suit.

Many American companies are feeling the heat, so they're setting up plans to assure the EU that they're still trustworthy. Such schemes include Microsoft's EU Data Boundary, AWS European Sovereign Cloud, and Google Cloud Sovereign Cloud.

Europeans aren't buying it. They're becoming increasingly skeptical of US hyperscalers' "sovereign cloud" branding. After all, they cannot realistically promise immunity from American executive orders or from the CLOUD Act.

As Margrethe Vestager, the EU's former competition commissioner, told The Times, it's high time for the EU to break its dependency on America. "If it can happen once that a judge cannot use their email or does not have payment options, then it can happen again... We are so dependent on Chinese and US technology for that infrastructure. It's a dependency, and it can be weaponized against us."

Carrez framed digital sovereignty as a spectrum of resilience, not a yes-or-no state. He said: "No country, including the US, is actually completely digitally sovereign." Carrez noted that chips and components originate from deeply globalized supply chains that no bloc can fully replicate.

Instead of chasing an impossible 100 percent domestic stack, governments and operators are starting to diversify their exposure to reduce dependence on a single origin. Of course, this isn't new. As early as 2004, the German city of Munich moved to a Linux desktop. While the financial hub eventually moved back to Windows after Microsoft moved its German headquarters to Munich, its government is once more supporting open source.

Today, it's not Windows so much that has Europeans worried as their dependence on Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, and other US‑based collaboration tools. Carrez said the debate has "moved from tactical to strategic," with ministries now asking for full national usage maps of Gmail, Outlook, and proprietary office suites.

Of course, Windows is part of that discussion. There is growing backlash against Windows 11's locked-in integration with cloud‑connected AI features such as Copilot and file storage services such as OneDrive and Google Drive.

Carrez, a Linux desktop user, doesn't think EU governments are ready quite yet for Linux desktops. He told me the sovereignty conversation is "happening at all levels of the stack," but governments are prioritizing infrastructure and collaboration tools over the end‑user interface. A Linux desktop future for public administrations may still come, he suggested, but only "at the end of that conversation," once resilient, sovereign back‑end services are in place.

At the same time, though, some EU governments are backing or subsidizing domestic, open‑source‑based office platforms. These alternatives to Microsoft 365 and Google Docs, often based on Nextcloud, are rapidly being rolled out. In particular, France, Germany, and Austria are all pursuing their own sovereign productivity stacks. 

That's all well and good, but Carrez lamented that they "need to talk" to avoid a patchwork of incompatible efforts. In parallel, regulators in countries such as the Netherlands and Germany are scrutinizing whether public sector reliance on US suites can ever truly comply with GDPR, further accelerating interest in local or European providers.

The sovereignty debate is also exposing a tech skills gap that cloud convenience helped create. Carrez noted that European universities have spent a decade handing students free credits for US clouds and Microsoft 365 accounts, while quietly de‑emphasizing fundamentals of infrastructure operations. That dependence now bites: public and private organizations seeking to bring workloads home are struggling to hire engineers to build and run local platforms.

Digital sovereignty isn't just an EU issue. While Brussels has made "digital sovereignty" a flagship talking point, Kubecon speakers stressed that the concern is now global. Carrez pointed to Viettel, Vietnam's largest telecom operator, which is part of a top‑down national push to keep critical workloads running on open source software on local infrastructure. Similar moves are underway in South Korea and other countries that sit close to great‑power fault lines and want to avoid Europe's mistake of putting "all their eggs in the US hyperscaler basket."

In the EU, the UK, and other places that now find themselves tied to untrustworthy American technology partners, the move to open source and domestic datacenters and clouds is now a priority. Whether it's just you in your home or you're the CIO of a major company or government agency, you need to partner with reliable open source providers to run an IT stack that you, not Trump, control. ®