Europe

8135 readers
433 users here now

News and information from Europe 🇪🇺

(Current banner: La Mancha, Spain. Feel free to post submissions for banner images.)

Rules (2024-08-30)

  1. This is an English-language community. Comments should be in English. Posts can link to non-English news sources when providing a full-text translation in the post description. Automated translations are fine, as long as they don't overly distort the content.
  2. No links to misinformation or commercial advertising. When you post outdated/historic articles, add the year of publication to the post title. Infographics must include a source and a year of creation; if possible, also provide a link to the source.
  3. Be kind to each other, and argue in good faith. Don't post direct insults nor disrespectful and condescending comments. Don't troll nor incite hatred. Don't look for novel argumentation strategies at Wikipedia's List of fallacies.
  4. No bigotry, sexism, racism, antisemitism, islamophobia, dehumanization of minorities, or glorification of National Socialism. We follow German law; don't question the statehood of Israel.
  5. Be the signal, not the noise: Strive to post insightful comments. Add "/s" when you're being sarcastic (and don't use it to break rule no. 3).
  6. If you link to paywalled information, please provide also a link to a freely available archived version. Alternatively, try to find a different source.
  7. Light-hearted content, memes, and posts about your European everyday belong in other communities.
  8. Don't evade bans. If we notice ban evasion, that will result in a permanent ban for all the accounts we can associate with you.
  9. No posts linking to speculative reporting about ongoing events with unclear backgrounds. Please wait at least 12 hours. (E.g., do not post breathless reporting on an ongoing terror attack.)
  10. Always provide context with posts: Don't post uncontextualized images or videos, and don't start discussions without giving some context first.

(This list may get expanded as necessary.)

Posts that link to the following sources will be removed

Unless they're the only sources, please also avoid The Sun, Daily Mail, any "thinktank" type organization, and non-Lemmy social media (incl. Substack). Don't link to Twitter directly, instead use xcancel.com. For Reddit, use old:reddit:com

(Lists may get expanded as necessary.)

Ban lengths, etc.

We will use some leeway to decide whether to remove a comment.

If need be, there are also bans: 3 days for lighter offenses, 7 or 14 days for bigger offenses, and permanent bans for people who don't show any willingness to participate productively. If we think the ban reason is obvious, we may not specifically write to you.

If you want to protest a removal or ban, feel free to write privately to the primary mod account @EuroMod@feddit.org

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
1
 
 

The ideas here in this post are not without precedent. I look up to initiaves like Gaia-X with cautious optimism. However, I believe it is important, nevertheless, to put them out in the public and discuss them ever so often.

Like roads, ports, and power grids, data centers have become critical infrastructure. They underpin almost every function of a modern economy: commerce, communication, healthcare, public administration, defense, and scientific research. Treating them as optional or purely private assets no longer reflects economic reality. The question is therefore not whether they are essential, but whether it is prudent to rely almost exclusively on private, often foreign, providers to operate them.

There are two compelling reasons for the state to offer a public option in data center and cloud infrastructure (amongst others).

First, a public option would introduce natural competitive pressure into a market that is increasingly concentrated. Hyperscale cloud providers benefit from extreme economies of scale, network effects, and high switching costs, which together weaken meaningful price competition. This creates a real risk of price gouging, vendor lock-in, and unilateral changes to terms of service that users, especially small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and public institutions, are powerless to resist. A state-backed alternative does not need to dominate the market to be effective; it only needs to exist as a credible option to discipline pricing and behavior across the sector.

Second, a public offering would provide a genuine guarantee of service for critical systems. Certain workloads (public registries, healthcare platforms, emergency services, scientific archives, and strategic industries) should not be subject to abrupt commercial pressures, geopolitical risk, or shareholder-driven priorities. By enabling these systems to be hosted on publicly owned infrastructure, states can ensure long-term continuity, transparency, and sovereignty, while still benefiting from modern tooling and professional operations.

It is increasingly popular, particularly in open-source circles, to imagine a future in which self-hosting replaces large-scale cloud services. While admirable in spirit, this vision underestimates the economic reality of infrastructure. Self-hosting loses competitiveness precisely where reliability, redundancy, security, and energy efficiency matter most. These are domains where economies of scale are decisive. Expecting individuals, nonprofits, or small organizations to replicate them independently is neither realistic nor efficient. The economies of scale are just not on the side of this strategy.

A state-backed option represents a pragmatic middle ground. Like public transportation, water utilities, or postal services, it leverages collective funding through taxation to achieve scale that no individual contributor could reasonably attain. Crucially, this does not preclude private innovation or competition. Instead, it ensures that essential services remain accessible, affordable, and more resilient.

Part of the resistance to this idea stems from the persistent mystification of data centers and web services. There is a widespread belief that only “Big Tech” can operate them competently. In reality, the technical knowledge required has never been more accessible. Decades of best practices, open standards, and free documentation are available to anyone willing to apply them. What Big Tech primarily offers is not secret knowledge, but capital concentration and scale (both of which governments already possess). I believe this is an important notion we need to spread more diligently. Without a doubt, new agencies created for these purposes will make mistakes, but they will be necessary learning steps towards the provision of an essential service.

At the European level, the opportunity is especially clear. Twenty-seven economies, aligned by regulatory frameworks and shared interests, could establish interoperable, publicly owned infrastructure following common standards. Such an initiative would reduce dependency on American providers, strengthen digital sovereignty, and dramatically improve access to high-quality networking and computing services for SMEs, startups, and public institutions.

However, such an effort would need to begin at the national level to prove its viability. Pilot projects, limited-scope public clouds, and targeted use cases would allow governments to validate the model before broader adoption. But the potential upside (economic resilience, strategic autonomy, fairer competition, long-term cost control) is substantial.

In short, treating data centers as public infrastructure is neither radical nor unprecedented. It is a rational response to their growing centrality in modern life. The question is no longer whether states can do this, but whether they can afford not to.

2
 
 

Archived: https://archive.ph/qEUcn

The election results could test Kosovo's commitment to its EU path

3
4
 
 

Web archive link

...

On Dec. 15, the European Union imposed sanctions on the International Russophile Movement, or IRM. Few people had heard of it, but over the past three years it has effectively replaced official pro-Kremlin organizations formerly operating in the EU, where life for them became far more difficult after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The Russian World Foundation, the Gorchakov Foundation, and Pravfond — all controlled by Russia’s Foreign Ministry — faced sanctions, asset freezes, staff expulsions and increased oversight. As a result, the IRM emerged in 2023 under the auspices of the Foreign Ministry and Konstantin Malofeev, a billionaire fraudster with ties to Russian intelligence services.

Although the movement is publicly presented as a grassroots initiative made up of EU citizens, in practice the IRM is backed by several Kremlin influence networks. The “Russophiles” openly said they feared sanctions and did not plan to create legal entities, but that did not help. The new structure appears headed for the same inglorious fate as the earlier Kremlin puppet organizations that were sanctioned after the start of the full-scale war.

...

An alliance of political marginals and conspiracy theorists

The founding congress of the International Russophile Movement was held in Moscow in March 2023. According to the organizers, around 90 representatives from 42 countries attended the event. Prominent “Russophiles” among the guests included actor Steven Seagal, former French president Charles de Gaulle’s grandson Pierre, and Italian princess Vittoria Alliata di Villafranca (who translated The Lord of the Rings into her native language). The Guardian described the participants as “political marginals and conspiracy theorists.”

Those who came to support and guide the “Russophiles” included Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, his deputies Mikhail Bogdanov and Alexander Grushko; Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, Rossotrudnichestvo head Yevgeny Primakov, “Orthodox oligarch” Konstantin Malofeeev, far-right philosopher Alexander Dugin, and the chairs of the international affairs committees from both chambers of the Russian parliament — LDPR leader Leonid Slutsky and senator Grigory Karasin. At the congress, Lavrov read out a message from Vladimir Putin that noted the “targeted anti-Russian hysteria in many countries” and thanked the participants for their “firm resolve to oppose the Russophobic campaign.” General Charles de Gaulle's grandson Pierre de Gaulle with State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin at a meeting in Moscow

...

5
 
 

Archived: https://archive.ph/zocHJ

Tensions between the centre-right PP and far-right Vox appear to have triggered this sudden electoral wave

6
 
 

Web archive link

Spain’s beleaguered prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, faces a key test on Sunday when voters in the south-western region of Extremadura cast their ballots in the first major election to be held since a series of corruption and sexual harassment allegations enveloped his inner circle, his party and his administration.

Extremadura, once a stronghold of Sánchez’s Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE), has been in the hands of the conservative People’s party (PP) since 2023, when the latter managed to form a short-lived coalition government with the far-right Vox party, despite finishing just behind the socialists.

Sunday’s snap election was called two months ago by the regional president, María Guardiola, after the PSOE and her erstwhile allies in Vox voted down next year’s budget.

Though ostensibly a regional affair, the results of Sunday’s election will be felt well beyond Extremadura. Politicians and pundits will be scrutinising the poll to determine the extent of the damage that the allegations of recent weeks and months have inflicted on the PSOE, while the PP is likely to be forced, once again, to cut a deal with Vox to govern.

...

7
 
 

...

Arguably the biggest misconception of all [about Spain]... is that Spain’s economy, the EU’s fourth-largest, is “booming”. According to numerous key metrics, including productivity growth, unemployment, and (most tellingly) surveys of the country’s actual citizens, it isn’t.

...

Compared to other EU countries, it is true that Spain’s GDP growth has been extraordinario in recent years. CaixaBank, the country’s largest domestic lender, reported earlier this week that Spain’s output has risen 10% since 2019, well above the eurozone average of 6.4% and a whopping one hundred times more than Germany’s anaemic 0.1% expansion.

The swift growth also shows little sign of subsiding. Earlier this month, the European Commission and the Bank of Spain both hiked their Spanish growth forecasts for this year to 2.9% – more than double the EU’s 1.4% average projected expansion. “Real GDP growth is expected to remain strong in 2025,” the Commission noted, adding that “economic activity” is also expected to “remain robust” until 2027.

...

But as José Boscá, an economist at the FEDEA think tank in Madrid, points out, Spain’s GDP data “is not so promising” when adjusted for its population growth, which has also swelled in recent years. “If we only assess economic growth based on GDP data, there are factors that we are not taking into consideration,” Boscá said.

Indeed, Spain’s GDP growth is largely a direct consequence of its growing population. Soaring immigration – especially from Latin America – has caused Spain’s overall population to surge in recent years, and, predictably, has also caused its total output and consumption to rise.

According to the Elcano Royal Institute, the country’s immigrant population has risen by roughly 600,000 people per year since the end of the pandemic, pushing its population to a record high of just under 50 million. Roughly one in five people now living in Spain were born abroad.

In addition to boosting net output, the influx of workers has boosted government revenue and, by tempering wage rises, has helped keep inflation barely a fraction above the European Central Bank’s 2% target rate.

...

But it has also exacerbated Spain’s chronic shortage of affordable housing and compounded the country’s cost-of-living crisis – especially for young people, the vast majority of whom still live with their parents and a quarter of whom are currently unemployed. According to the latest available data from Eurostat, the average Spaniard only leaves home at the age of 30: well above the bloc’s average of 26.

...

Profound structural obstacles remain. These include high government debt-to-GDP levels inherited from the eurozone crisis and pandemic; widespread unemployment; and political instability partly engendered by Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s minority government, which has been mired in corruption scandals involving his inner circle. Due to the political dysfunction, Spain hasn’t managed to pass a new budget since 2022, forcing the government to rollover the 2023 budget, even as its booming population and robust tax revenues have created a new reality in the country.

That said, not even a new budget would address Spain’s biggest problem: low productivity. Boscá noted that this is largely a result of the composition of Spain’s industrial sector, where 99.8% of firms are small and medium-sized enterprises consisting of fewer than 10 employees. This industrial landscape inevitably curtails productivity growth and domestic investment.

...

Spain, in short, is growing – just not in the way many headlines suggest. Strip out the population surge and the picture looks far less miraculous. And unless productivity finally stirs, the boom will remain more statistical than real. For a country long burdened by clichés, it may turn out that the greatest misconception of all wasn’t about siestas or sangria, but about the strength of its comeback.

Archived link

8
 
 

X wasn't fined for allowing free speech. This is absolute bullshit.

X was fined for:

  • Refusing to disclose who buys ads
  • Refusing to cooperate with researchers studying the algorithm
  • Allowing scammers to obtain blue checkmark accounts without verifying their identities

https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_25_2934

9
-31
submitted 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) by Jareli@lemmy.world to c/europe@feddit.org
10
11
12
13
 
 

Archived link

...

The country’s interior minister, Igor Taro, said the border guards had entered Estonia after crossing the Narva River on the vessel at around 10am on Wednesday.

The Estonian foreign ministry will summon the Russian chargé d’affaires after the alleged intrusion.

...

For months, Russian drones and planes have been entering Nato airspace in what appears to be a deliberate campaign of provocation against the alliance, which is supporting Ukraine’s war effort.

This has included fighter jet incursions into Poland and Romania, weather balloons being sent over the Lithuanian border from Belarus and sightings of drones near airports in Denmark.

...

In September, three Russian military jets violated Estonia’s airspace for 12 minutes in an “unprecedentedly brazen” incursion, according to the government. Estonian foreign minister Margus Tsahkna said it was the fourth time that Russia had violated Estonian airspace in 2025.

...

The latest incursion came hours before the Estonian prime minister, Kristen Michal, visited Brussels for a summit with EU leaders over whether to approve a €90bn (£79bn) loan to fund Ukraine’s war effort using frozen Russian assets.

During a press conference at the summit, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said that all the signals showed that Moscow was not seriously interested in peace with Europe ... Warnings are growing across the continent that Europe must be ready for further Russian aggression.

...

14
 
 

An estimated 20,000 Ukrainian children are believed to have been deported and/or forcibly transferred from occupied territories into Russia. Some have allegedly been illegally adopted by Russian families, with their names – and in some cases even their place of birth – altered, making reunification even more difficult.

Diplomatic efforts to engage directly with Moscow have yielded almost no results, with just 20 Ukrainian children returned, according to Russian authorities. The few children who have been returned had been displaced in occupied Ukrainian territory, not in Russia, says [human rights lawyer Kateryna] Rashevska, making the need for international accountability imperative.

...

Archived link

15
 
 

Web archive link

Russia carried out cyberattacks against infrastructure and websites in Denmark in 2024 and 2025, Danish authorities say in a new assessment published this week describing new cases not previously reported.

Moscow was responsible for “destructive and disruptive” cyberattacks on a Danish water utility company in 2024 and a series of denial of service attacks which overwhelmed Danish websites ahead of regional and local elections last month, Denmark’s Defense Intelligence Service said in a statement Thursday. The water company said the attack caused pipes to burst, leaving homes temporarily without water.

Jan Hansen, the head of the Tureby Alkestrup Waterworks southwest of the capital Copenhagen, said his advice to other companies was not to cut costs on cybersecurity and to take out cyber insurance. The attack happened, he said, because the waterworks switched to cheaper cybersecurity, which was not as secure as that previously.

...

The Danish intelligence service said the attacks were part of Russia’s “hybrid war” against the West and an attempt to create instability. It said Moscow’s cyberattacks are part of a broader campaign to undermine and punish countries which support Ukraine. Russian hackers have previously been accused of carrying out hacks on other water facilities in Europe — including on a Norwegian dam where Norwegian authorities said hackers opened valves to allow water to pour out.

16
 
 

On Nov. 28, a Russian attack lasting more than 10 hours struck Ukrainian cities, with Kyiv as the main target. The Kyiv Independent […] spent the night with a Kyiv family sheltering in a parking garage with their three children.

As Russian drones and missiles reached the city, the family followed their routine in the shelter and shared how their perception of the war has changed over the years — and why they continue to stay in Ukraine despite the regular, deadly attacks.

17
18
 
 

cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/43978801

Web archive link

The British government said Friday it is investigating a “cyber incident” following news reports that hackers linked to China have gained access to thousands of confidential documents held by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

Trade Minister Chris Bryant said the investigation began in October and the government believes there is a “fairly low risk” that anyone’s personal information has been compromised.

...

The allegations come at a sensitive time in Britain’s relationship with China as Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government tries to rebuild trade and diplomatic links that have been strained by concerns about Chinese spying and human rights abuses.

Starmer reportedly plans to travel to China in late January, the first time a British prime minister will visit the country since 2018. Meanwhile, the government has delayed a decision on China’s plans to build a massive new embassy in London amid criticism that it could be used as a base for espionage.

19
 
 

Ursula von der Leyen had hoped to sign the agreement in Brazil this week.

20
 
 

cross-posted from : https://lemmy.zip/post/55358420

In November, Ukrainians purchased 3,908 Chinese passenger cars, which is 4.8 times more than last year. The vast majority of them are electric vehicles, accounting for 93% of the total volume.

21
 
 

...

Sánchez appears to support all viable options and is content with all possible outcomes on major international issues, avoiding taking sides and emerging unscathed from major disputes among his EU counterparts.

...

[After a meeting with Yolanda Díaz, the leader of his left-wing junior coalition partner Sumar ... amidst a worsening government crisis following new bombshell corruption scandals, coupled with sexual harassment allegations against the ruling Socialist Party (PSOE), the left is now putting pressure on Sanchez.

But prime minister said he has “no problem” with Díaz discussing a government crisis, or with the Mercosur agreement that he so vigorously defended being postponed, or with the repayment loan being rejected in favour of another scheme. For Sánchez, everything seems fine as long as he guarantees his own political survival.

Archived link

22
23
24
 
 

The court nonetheless ordered Shein to implement age-verification measures before resuming selling "sexual products that could constitute pornographic content."

25
 
 

cross-posted from : https://slrpnk.net/post/31668843

Europe has some of the world’s most ambitious climate goals, but in recent months it has backtracked on rules governing automobile emissions and deforestation.

Title and subtitle from the article version of this newsletter. Main link points to the unpaywalled newsletter version

view more: next ›