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Every data centre is a U.S. military base

policyalternatives.ca

88 points by HotGarbage 16 days ago · 57 comments

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istanbulbebesi 16 days ago

Cutting ties with US tech companies is one of the most important things the rest of us need to do these days.

  • NicoJuicy 16 days ago

    You're not wrong. But let's wait a month, last time cashing in on US stocks.

    There's potentially coming a whole lot of European € back to the European market

causalmodels 16 days ago

The article's Karim Khan example pretty deeply undercuts the thesis. Losing access to your bank account is the actual coercive power. Losing a Microsoft email is an inconvenience in comparison.

The real 'military bases' are banks.

  • a_humean 16 days ago

    If your business has everything on GCP/AWS/Azure (which is very common) and the Americans choose to weaponinse US tech against your country or business, then unless you have non-US backups you are probably dead and all of your employees unemployed. If you are a state, all of your services and functions are probably dead and you have to rebuild from nothing. That is certainly true of my company and there are some mutterings starting where I am internally about worst case disaster recovery if suddenly one of these suppliers just disapeared.

    In this new world you cannot trust that this will not happen. As a European relying on the Americans is honestly probably little better than relying on the Russians and probably on par with relying on the Chinese in terms of risk profile. Note we are actually for all intents and purposes at war with Russia.

    The amount of leverage the Americans have over Europe is insane, and every captial should be trying to mitgate that risk asap.

    • formerly_proven 16 days ago

      European companies largely do not recognize this as a risk because they consider B2B contracts with Microsoft or AWS essentially iron-clad.

      • zwaps 16 days ago

        This is because Europeans can not listen.

        Microsoft executives under oath said that they will not be able to honor those contracts if there is pressure from the US administration. We should know this, but we keep forgetting: laws, contracts, courts etc always bow before political and military might. In peacetime, we delude ourselves into thinking it aint so.

        The situation is now clear as day. What op stated is 100 percent correct.

        The US will have successfully invaded an EU country by 2027.

        They will, if it comes to this, immediately and successfully weaponize all three hyperscalers.

        It is abundantly clear where thinks are going.

        If any country, organization or company is not prepared for this by mid 2026, they are blind and deaf

        • surgical_fire 16 days ago

          You are correct. In Europe, governments and businesses should treat the US as a hostile foreign country, and relying on anything from there is a massive risk.

          The only thing is that weaponizing the hyperscalers would also be disastrous for the hyperscalers. They would be liable to lose their assets in Europe, access to European markets, etc and so on. Which would as a consequence cause a tangible harm to the US economy itself.

          Not that in Europe we should rely on it for anything. Any business is wise to move away from any sort of dependency that is subject to US pressure. Governments in particular should consider it a matter of life and death.

          • Roark66 16 days ago

            We (Polish) have been raising an alarm about Russia since the first Chechen war and it took additional dozen+ years and a land invasion of a European country before countries in Western EU woke up.

            Do you think they are going to be quicker reacting to danger from the other side?

            I highly doubt it. EU is like a huge steam ship. It takes a lot of effort to turn it. But once it gets going good luck stopping it. This will have consequences for the EU-Us relations for the rest of this century.

            I fact it is exactly what a Russian agent if he managed to become a president of US would do. A Putin's wet dream basically. Be hostile enough towards Russia to preserve appearances - seize a tanker or two, while undermining long term US and EU interests (the interests of these two are naturally aligned very well, it takes much more than an idiot to drive a wedge between them).

            • surgical_fire 15 days ago

              The thing is that the EU is a complex structure. The interests of countries such as Poland, Italy, Germany and Ireland differ wildly, which is why things are so slow to maneuver, politically speaking.

              I always considered that the over reliance on US a weakness. It was comfortable because it postpones some difficult discussions (for example, in terms of defense and military spending it is completely bonkers for the EU to not act as a federal entity). Since this subject is thorny, it was alright to rely on the US for defense and just kick this can down the road.

              The US becoming hostile at least forces the countries in the EU to face reality a little, and perhaps speed some things up (see for example the recent EU-Mercosur trade agreement).

            • Eddy_Viscosity2 15 days ago

              The other factor is that both Russia and the US have people 'on the inside' in the EU governments. They bought them. They own them and they do what they are told.

      • Tepix 16 days ago

        This used to be true but it's rapidly changing.

        • epolanski 16 days ago

          My clients are slowly but surely migrating to European cloud vendors, Scaleway especially.

    • general1465 16 days ago

      > If your business has everything on GCP/AWS/Azure (which is very common) and the Americans choose to weaponinse US tech against your country or business,

      these companies have datacenters in Europe too. It is not wild to think that if push comes to shove and US cut off Europe, then Europeans can just take control over those European data centers and restore access to GCP/AWS/Azure in Europe because these datacenters are on their soil and predominantly employing Europeans.

      • Roark66 16 days ago

        >. It is not wild to think that if push comes to shove and US cut off Europe, then Europeans can just take control over those European data centers and restore access to GCP/AWS/Azure in Europe because these datacenters are on their soil and predominantly employing Europeans.

        Good luck with that. Those systems are extremely interconnected. We should (and are) be building sovereign EU equivalents to not just cloud providers but also major services like google/ms 365 and so on.

        • Woodi 15 days ago

          > Google/ms/aws...

          Meh.

          EU need to start with own PC hardware factories first. And PC compatible designs. What is unlikely - on first sight of troubles they will buy everything from US. As all good 3rd Word countries do.

  • jsiepkes 16 days ago

    There are plenty banks owned and operated within the EU. One bank folded for US pressure but when push comes to shove the EU can force banks in the EU to uphold EU rules and regulations.

    That's not the case for digital infrastructure like Google Workspace, Google cloud, Office 365, AWS, etc.

    • wickedsight 16 days ago

      > when push comes to shove the EU can force banks in the EU to uphold EU rules and regulations.

      This made me realize that many people who are extremely critical of the power the EU has, have no idea how much that power is often protecting them.

      This is not a dismissal of the fact that it's absolutely critical to stay vigilant about how that power is used. But it's quite clear that without that power, the US would've abused theirs way more within Europe.

    • phi0 16 days ago

      When the US sanctioned Hong Kong’s Chief Executive in 2020, because of a law allowing extradition to China, no single bank was letting her open an account, including Chinese ones. She was receiving her salary fully in cash.

      The EU compelling banks to do business despite US sanctions seems pretty unlikely even if relations continue to degrade.

    • tomjen3 16 days ago

      AWS, etc has datacenters in the EU.

      Microsoft relies on the EUs courts to recognise their property rights.

  • Qwertious 16 days ago

    >Losing a Microsoft email is an inconvenience in comparison.

    Losing access to data is potentially worse than losing access to your bank account. I doubt Microsoft will let you grab a copy of all your emails after they block/ban you.

  • epolanski 16 days ago

    You may have tied your services, e.g. your digital bank account to your email.

    This is a very major inconvenience.

hairofadog 16 days ago

I've been amazed that US CEOs haven't pushed back harder on the administration due to the threat of the rest of the world leaving US services like these.

I know the goverment has a lot of power over even the largest companies, but these companies also have power, and moving into a world in which AWS, Apple, Microsoft, and Google can only operate in the US, and maybe with the Saudis, isn't going to be good for shareholders.

They bent a knee to this administration so fast. I'm curious to see if there will be an equally fast pivot in the other direction when Trump starts showing holes in his armor. There will come a time when corporate greed no longer points in the direction of Trumpism.

elric 16 days ago

So what's the solution?

Monitoring of "hostile" workloads at datacentre scale is not going to work.

Should we throw away 80 years of trade, cooperation, and the resulting prosperity and go back into ridiculous tribalism?

  • a_humean 16 days ago

    Unfortunately yes, and its the US that has choosen to do it. Its up to everyone else to recongise that it has already happened, or suffer the consequences if they choose not to respond.

  • zwaps 16 days ago

    Just to be clear: the US has already done this.

    All we can do is face the facts and pick up the pieces.

  • RobotToaster 16 days ago

    >Should we throw away 80 years of trade, cooperation, and the resulting prosperity and go back into ridiculous tribalism?

    The US is already doing that, pretending otherwise is just hopeless naivete.

  • baq 16 days ago

    The folks who won those 80 years and remember what it took and what was before are all but gone now. Not a coincidence.

    • formerly_proven 16 days ago

      "weak men create hard times" is actually somewhat correct, just not in the way maga thinks.

    • globalnode 16 days ago

      the same folks that presided over catastrophic global warming, animal cruelty at industrial scales and human inequality i presume. maybe we can wind those back now theyre gone?

      • baq 16 days ago

        Global warming is the only net new thing on the list and it pays for itself if we get to fusion or planet scale solar. If we don’t, we’re back to the stone age either way.

  • vander_elst 16 days ago

    Probably yes at least to a certain level. At the moment to many countries are relying too heavily on a single point of failure, there should be independent alternatives so that is possible to have more and better competition and in case the administration of the current single point of failure goes nuts it's possible to switch over to something else.

  • jauntywundrkind 15 days ago

    Supporting local & international chip making, building data centers & driving access to PCs, and most crucially funding and using open source!

    Which thankfully amazingly might happen!!! https://www.techerati.com/news-hub/eu-pushes-for-open-source...

  • cicko 16 days ago

    Yes!

  • rurban 15 days ago

    Cooperation does not rhyme with exceptionalism and patriotism. You learn that school, it's not a recent thing.

    And all the US leaders are united in fascism: denying worker rights, slave economy, and private contracts trumping national laws and regulations.

    • bigbadfeline 15 days ago

      > And all the US leaders are united in fascism: denying worker rights, slave economy, and private contracts trumping national laws and regulations.

      It's not "all the US leaders" and those are quite a small fraction of "all of the US". Then, despite some similarities, it's not "fascism" either. I mean, seek friends, don't create enemies.

      I see a lot of Europeans here have written the US off which is a huge mistake... I'd say, you fell for the trick.

      Don't forget to take a careful look at your own EU leaders and beware of your own nationalism, you (the EU) are definitely one of the actors in this theater. I'd say, study history, look around your own backyard, think, it's not as simple as it seems.

      That doesn't mean you shouldn't try to diversify email or other digital services, but this is still a technical solution to a political problem - a temporary patch at best, useless for any meaningful stretch of time.

cpursley 16 days ago

I'll probably get downvoted for even suggesting this, but the EU should consider doing what Russia did (and one of the big reasons they are so resilient against sanctions): create own alternative banking protocol to SWIFT and VISA/Mastercard equiv. (MIR), own social networks (vkontact) and big tech (ozon, yandex, etc). EU seems to be actually okay on the datacenter front. Not sure how to handle the operating system and device side - too bad Nokia is dead. Certainly they have the talent, it's the consensus and will that's required. They really shouldn't have let American tech dominate there in the first place.

  • Etheryte 16 days ago

    Isn't this literally what the Digital Euro project is? These things take time and effort, they've been working on it since 2021 iirc.

  • saubeidl 16 days ago

    SWIFT is actually a Belgian organization. I agree with the rest of the post though.

  • tomjen3 16 days ago

    Anyone on HN can write a Swift alternative protocol in a few days. XML documents signed with public keys is a good start. The trick is to get the banks to use them and to integrate them in their systems, but the EU is capable of writing banking regulations.

    Operating systems are even easier - pick your flavour of Linux - devices are all made in China anyway.

    Its the cloud and software part that sucks. VPSes aside, almost any managed service is US based.

    AI has made this even worse.

    • baq 16 days ago

      Expect mistral to keep getting large cash infusions until they get competitive.

      Managed services weren’t needed because big tech was bending to EU regulations and buying out alternatives. The services aren’t rocket science; plenty of euro devs participated and still participate in building them, they’re just on US big tech payrolls. Expertise is there, money isn’t, yet.

    • cpursley 16 days ago

      Good point. The data center hardware is there and there's plenty of open source for things like PaaS and AWS compatible systems. Bewildering that this does not exist and everyone just used AWS.

  • a_humean 16 days ago

    If I recall correctly, Russia required that Visa/Mastercard had offices and payment services located in Russia and they simply nationalised those branches and everyone's cards continued to work within Russia with minimal disruption to internal trade.

justinclift 15 days ago

Wonder if the Greenland debate and Trump's threats to impose Tariffs on the countries not in favour of the US getting it, will be the straw that breaks the camels' back for any EU countries?

ie time to move their gov infrastructure way the hell out of US tech company hands

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