Let's forget not to buy Canadian products
Buy European
Overview:
The community to discuss buying European goods and services.
Related Communities:
Buy Local:
Buying and Selling:
Boycott:
Great idea but you're not going to make it if you don't accept submissions and have some sort of process to have them vetted by a community of helpers of some kind.
Also, I can't help but noticing:
buyeuropean@lemmy.ca to Buy European@feddit.uk
π
That is great feedback, thank you!
We definitely want to make it more interactive. First of all submitting suggestions. Then we might add ratings and comments.
To be honest, I am new to the whole Fediverse technology and am still trying to wrap my head around it - so I created two accounts which I guess I did not need. Never stop learning! π
No I meant, it's amusing that Buy-European is a community on a UK instance and you - the OP - are on a Canadian one π But it's cool, no problem.
Oh! See, a lot to learn. I'm sure I will figure it out at some point. π«
No no you're fine. The instance really doesn't matter.
You're doing great, thanks for joining us!
Just added the "Submit suggestion" feature. Thanks again for your feedback!
Welcome to Lemmy, thank you for posting here!
Canva (an Australian company) bought Serif not long ago, so Affinity Photo is technically Australian software now. Might want to update that list ^^
We are still evaluating how to assess that as the company Serif is still located in the UK AFAIK which means that they work under European legislation. If they should start to shift everything to Australia that would change but right now we check for the company address and not for the owners of that company - definitely up for discussion what's better.
I just think it's hard to address that as for example publicly traded companies are usually owned by several investors and might even be hold in majority by foreign investors - but the company itself has to follow regional laws which is what we focus on.
I donβt know if this has been suggested before but is there a way to categorise them? Something simple and easy to understand like gold, silver and bronze? Gold could be EU based companies that produce their products in the EU. Silver could be companies that are based in and produce their products in the wider European community (under European legislation). Bronze could be a company that fulfils one of those criteria like a European company who produces their products in China. Or even an American company who produces their products in Europe (it may mean profits going to America but it also means jobs in Europe and if thereβs nothing but non-European competitors in a sector then surely this is better?)
Fantastic idea! Technically we could add this quickly. Unfortunately I'm pretty sure we will not be able to editorially work on that within the next couple of weeks where we focus on expanding the database itself but we should definitely consider this! Maybe we can get some people on board who help with the research for this.
Thatβs fair, thanks for expanding on the criteria! Serif is indeed still located in the UK, I had a look before commenting. The address of the company headquarters matters, for sure.
for example publicly traded companies are usually owned by several investors and might even be hold in majority by foreign investors - but the company itself has to follow regional laws which is what we focus on.
Absolutely. Ubisoft is a great example of that. Last time I checked, Tencent owns a bunch of shares there - not enough for a majority, yet itβs still a concern for the future.
The site is bookmarked and Iβm looking forward to watching it develop!
Good initiative.
I gave here we go (navigation app) a try but I don't see how they earn money from this app which makes me wonder what they do with my location data and what not. I read their TOS but couldn't make much of it. I see something about location based ads but nowhere where I can buy an ad free version that does not track you.
I'm all for european alternatives but we should be wary we do not fall for the same shit as their US counterparts.
Royal Enfield was originally a UK company but was sold off and is now an Indian company: https://www.udayavani.com/english-news/is-royal-enfield-an-indian-company
Thanks for the info - it's now removed!
Oh, that's blazing fast β‘
π«‘