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Manufacturing qubits that can move
Tech/AI

Manufacturing qubits that can move

by admin May 8, 2026
written by admin

Like any other manufactured chip, the wiring that connects the quantum dots is locked into place during the chip’s manufacture. Since different error correction schemes require different connections among the qubits, this forces us to commit to specific error-correction schemes during manufacturing. If a better scheme is developed after a chip is made, it’s probably not possible to switch to it. Less complex algorithms may benefit from simpler error-correction schemes that require less overhead, but we wouldn’t be able to switch schemes with these chips.

So, quantum dots appear to typify the trade-offs that we’re facing with quantum computing: it’s easier for us to make lots of quantum dots and all the hardware needed to manipulate them, but it’s seemingly not possible for them to benefit from the flexibility that other types of qubits have.

The whole point of this new paper is to show that this isn’t necessarily true.

Moveable dots

The new work was done in collaboration between researchers at Delft University of Technology and the startup QuTech. The team built a chip that had a linear array of quantum dots, and they started out with single electron spins at each end. Then, with the appropriate electrical signals, they could shift the spins into the net dot, gradually bringing them closer together. (And, by gradually, we mean a fraction of a second here, but relatively slowly compared to basic switching in electronics.)

Once the electrons were close enough, the spin wavefunctions overlapped, allowing the researchers to perform two-qubit gates on them. These manipulations can be used to entangle the two spins and are thus needed to build error-corrected logical qubits; these gates are also needed for performing calculations.

The researchers then confirmed that they could move the electrons back to their starting positions, after which measurements confirmed that their spins were entangled. And since quantum teleportation also requires a two-qubit gate, they showed that the process could be used for teleportation. Teleportation can enhance the sort of mobility provided by moving the qubits around, since it can be used to move states around after the qubits have been widely separated.

May 8, 2026 0 comments
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Why Some of America’s Most Influential Korean Chefs Are Turning to Farming
Lifestyle

Why Some of America’s Most Influential Korean Chefs Are Turning to Farming

by admin May 8, 2026
written by admin

The chefs worked together for several hours, first to sterilize the onggi over heated charcoal topped with a small amount of honey, which fumigate and purify the vessels. They then added the meju and salted water into the urns, stirring in jujube (a sweet fruit similar to a date) which adds natural sugar, antioxidants, and antimicrobials to balance the flavor of the fermentation. Dried chili peppers also help to stabilize the fermentation environment in the early stage.

Image may contain Rock Child Person Clothing Footwear and Shoe

Salt water is poured over the cloth, submerging the meju blocks.

Photograph by Janice Chung

Image may contain Food Meat Pork Cooking Pot Cookware Pot Food Presentation Child and Person

After water is added to the onggi, jujubes and red chilies are added to balance flavors and stabilize the fermentation.

Photograph by Janice Chung

The final step will come in a few months when the solids and liquids separate. The liquid becomes ganjang (soy sauce); the solids are mashed to become doenjang (soybean paste). “Both soy sauce and soybean paste are aged further, often for years,” said Ellia Park. “Time softens the saltiness, increases depth of flavor and natural umami develops. It is common in Korea to reference jang by its age—three-year, five-year, or even ten-year-old jang—reflecting its value and complexity.”

The farm comes at the right time in the evolution of Korean cuisine and culture. “Over the past 10 years, there has been a significant increase in global interest in Korean food and culture,” said First Hand Farm’s Director Joshua Lee. Growing Korean ingredients on New York soil is impactful as well. “I’ve come to think deeply about terroir,” said JP Park. “There is something meaningful about ingredients that are grown here, shaped by this environment. That contrast—Korean culinary philosophy expressed through New York-grown ingredients—can create a new kind of identity and experience.”

Paying it forward to the next generation, keeping rituals and traditions alive, is a value embedded in the project. “We want to educate younger cooks, and expose them to the connection between nature, ingredients, and cooking,” said JP Park. “That experience is difficult to replicate in a traditional kitchen environment, and I believe it will become a valuable part of how we train and develop our team.

For the chefs, the farm also represents a broader exploration of the meaning of hospitality.

“First Hand holds two meanings at once: ingredients grown by our own hands, and the very first gesture that makes hospitality possible,” said Ellia Park. “The farm also allows us to build something beyond procurement — a space for education, collaboration, and cultural exchange,” added chef Park. “The farm is not just about growing food. It’s about redefining where hospitality starts.”

May 8, 2026 0 comments
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Sony’s PS5 sales plummet amid price rises and a memory crisis
Tech/AI

Sony’s PS5 sales plummet amid price rises and a memory crisis

by admin May 8, 2026
written by admin

PS5 sales dropped by 46 percent year over year.

PS5 sales dropped by 46 percent year over year.

May 8, 2026, 9:15 AM UTC
Tom Warren
Tom Warren is a senior correspondent and author of Notepad, who has been covering all things Microsoft, PC, and tech for over 20 years.

Sony sold just 1.5 million PS5 consoles in its most recent fourth fiscal quarter, down 46 percent year over year. The slump in PS5 sales comes after Sony raised the price of its PS5 consoles twice over the past year, pushing the price of the regular PS5 from $499.99 all the way up to $649.99.

Sony blamed “continued pressures in the global economic landscape,” for the price hikes in March, amid an ongoing memory crisis and pressure from the war in Iran. Sony now forecasts that annual gaming revenue will drop 6 percent, but these forecasts could be impacted by ongoing memory costs. “We plan to base our PS5 hardware sales in FY26 on the volume of memory we can procure at reasonable prices and we expect hardware profitability to be essentially the same as FY25,” says Sony.

Sony previously revealed in February that it had secured “the minimum quantity necessary” of memory to manage the year-end shopping season and that it was working “with various suppliers to secure enough supply to meet the demand of our customers.” Across the whole 2025 financial year, Sony sold 16 million PS5 consoles, down from 18.5 million in the prior financial year.

It’s a tough market for hardware in general right now. Microsoft recently revealed its Xbox hardware revenues plummeted 33 percent year over year. Along with declining Xbox hardware revenue, Microsoft also reported a 5 percent drop in Xbox content and services. Nintendo is also raising its Switch 2 prices by $50 on September 1st and forecasting a drop in sales over the next year.

Sony also revealed that during the last financial year it has recorded a $765 million impairment cost against Bungie, the struggling studio behind Destiny 2 and Marathon. Sony first announced it was acquiring Bungie in a $3.6 billion deal just days after Microsoft’s announcement that it was acquiring Activision Blizzard in 2022. Bungie has been hit with with the layoff of hundreds of workers since joining Sony’s PlayStation division and was forced to delay its extraction shooter Marathon following lackluster alpha test feedback. Last year an artist accused Bungie of using their work in Marathon without permission, and the matter was resolved a few months later.

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May 8, 2026 0 comments
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Anti-war protests rock Japan as PM pushes for stronger defence
Global

Anti-war protests rock Japan as PM pushes for stronger defence

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

Now, Takaichi says this framework no longer reflects reality. Geographically, Japan sits in a challenging neighbourhood with an assertive China, an unpredictable North Korea, and Russia nearby. And the United States, its closest ally, has been encouraging Tokyo to play a more active security role.

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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DHS can’t create vast DNA database to track ICE critics, lawsuit says
Tech/AI

DHS can’t create vast DNA database to track ICE critics, lawsuit says

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

Refusing DNA collection not an option

Thirty-year-old Grace Cooper was also in the designated “free speech zone” when she was arrested in a clash that she described as “the most terrifying 90 seconds of her life.”

It was her first time at a Broadview protest, and Cooper didn’t know what to expect. On that day, Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino allegedly arbitrarily ruled that the designated area was suddenly a “free arrest zone,” then ordered protesters to move quickly from the area or else face arrest.

Although Cooper immediately turned to comply, an agent grabbed her from behind and “slammed her to the ground.” After her arrest, no agents could tell her what her crime was, and she even reported overhearing agents debating what her crime might possibly be.

Of the protesters suing, Cooper was the only one to refuse the DNA sample. Such refusal is a crime, the complaint noted, and agents did not allow her to decline. After hours, agents released her without charging her, dropping her off at “a nearby gas station” and refusing to give her any information about whether her case remained ongoing.

Like the others, Cooper’s “most immediate fear” after her arrest was “what the government will do with her DNA.”

“She worries the government will use her DNA to place her on a ‘domestic terrorist watchlist’ and track her movements—at airports, during traffic stops, and in ways she cannot anticipate or contest,” the complaint said.

Carey R. Dunne, a founder of the Free + Fair Litigation Group, which is representing Briggs in the lawsuit, told The New York Times that the protesters’ litigation addresses “a constellation of constitutional violations that needed to be challenged.”

The unchecked DNA collection “puts you and your family in a surveillance state database of people who’ve criticized this administration,” Dunne alleged, while suggesting that on an “authoritarian scale of one to 10, this is a 10.”

Briggs told the NYT that the lawsuit could clarify the DNA Act and potentially restore privacy for countless Americans who may be increasingly affected by the allegedly unconstitutional DNA collection.

“If we don’t have a right to our own selves, everything is going to break down,” Briggs said.

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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Here's what to expect from Friday's release of the April jobs report
Economy

Here’s what to expect from Friday’s release of the April jobs report

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

Jobseekers speak with recruiters during the WNC Career Expo job fair in Fletcher, North Carolina, US, on Thursday, April 16, 2026.
Allison Joyce | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Not that long ago, U.S. payroll growth of less than 100,000 or so a month meant the labor market was sinking and signaling a potential recession. No more, though, as that kind of number is pretty much all that is needed to keep unemployment steady and the Federal Reserve at bay.

When the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its job count for April on Friday morning at 8:30 a.m. ET, it’s expected to show a gain of just 55,000 — anemic compared with what the economy has seen in recent years, but enough to keep the jobless rate at a relatively low 4.3%.

The picture in total is one of a labor market that, while undoubtedly cooling, is generally stable and resilient despite a number of challenges.

“The headline message remains similar to previous employment reports, if anything, accentuated though,” said David Tinsley, senior economist at the Bank of America Institute. “The labor market momentum in terms of payrolls has really turned solid.”

The degree of stability, though, is in relative terms.

Against muted expectations, job gains totaled 178,000 in March, the best month since December 2024. But that still left the 12-month average at just 22,000. Excluding healthcare, the economy has seen a net loss of jobs.

Gains flow to the top

Understanding the current labor market requires looking beyond the headline numbers, said Tinsley, who referenced the popular K shape used to describe current economic conditions where benefits of prosperity are weighted toward top earners.

“It’s a really interesting set of kind of divergences across the economy. The overall picture seems to us quite solid, both in terms of wages and payrolls, but lots of Ks,” he said. “There’s lots of divergence in this economy right now, even though the headline looks solid.”

One area he cites particularly is wage growth.

Average hourly earnings are projected to have risen 3.8% annually in April, though that doesn’t tell the story of where the gains are flowing.

Bank of America’s deep well of data shows that in April, the top one-third of earners saw 6% after-tax wage gains while the bottom group showed a gain of 1.5%. That’s a particularly painful statistic considering that the consumer price index rose 3.5% through March, indicating that low earners saw a net loss of income.

“Just beneath the surface, distributions matter a lot here,” Tinsley said.

The economist further pointed out that hiring disparities are popping up regarding business size, with small businesses seeing declines over the past three months.

The Fed’s reaction

The crosscurrents are presenting challenges to Fed policymakers who have grown increasingly split over the direction of interest rate policy.

Earlier this week, New York Fed President John Williams noted the “conflicting signs” between data such as weekly jobless claims showing stability even as consumer sentiment surveys point to a softening picture.

“Much of the hard data points to stabilization, while some of the soft data suggest continued gradual slowing,” Williams said.

“Together, these indicators suggest increasing labor market slack,” Williams added, using a term synonymous with a softening labor market. “Although this dissonance in the hard and soft data may reflect the effects of a low-hire, low-fire labor market, it bears continued close monitoring for signs that conditions are shifting.”

Investors are betting that the labor market’s relative stability, combined with elevated inflation, will keep the Fed on hold through the year. Williams repeated his position that he sees monetary policy as “well-positioned” for the current climate.

Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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The Download: the tech reshaping IVF and the rise of balcony solar
Tech/AI

The Download: the tech reshaping IVF and the rise of balcony solar

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.

What’s next for IVF

IVF has brought millions of babies into the world over the last four decades. But the process can still be slow, painful, and expensive—and far from guaranteed to work. Now, a wave of new technologies aims to change that. 

Researchers are using AI to identify promising sperm and embryos, developing robotic systems that could automate parts of the IVF process, and even exploring controversial genetic editing techniques designed to prevent inherited disease.

The technologies could make IVF more effective and accessible. But they’re also raising difficult ethical questions about how far reproductive medicine should go.

Find out what’s next for IVF.

—Jessica Hamzelou

This story is from MIT Technology Review’s What’s Next series, which looks across industries, trends, and technologies to give you a first look at the future. You can read the rest of them here.

The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills.

Proponents say the systems could make solar power more accessible, but some experts caution that there are safety concerns. 

Read the full story on balcony solar’s potentially massive impact in the US.

—Casey Crownhart

This article is from The Spark, our weekly climate newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday.

Resistance: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now

Resistance against AI’s proliferation is growing. People from all walks of life are speaking out against rising electricity bills from data centers, disappearing jobs, chatbots’ impact on teen mental health, the military’s use of AI, and copyright infringement—among other concerns. 

People want to have a say in how the technology transforms their future. And they’re starting to create small cracks in AI labs’ vision for the future. Find out how.

—Michelle Kim

Resistance is on our list of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, MIT Technology Review’s guide to what’s really worth your attention in the buzzy world of AI. 

The must-reads

I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 After years of insults, Anthropic and SpaceX have teamed up
Anthropic will tap SpaceX’s GPUs to meet surging demand. (Axios)
+ While SpaceX gets a marquee customer for its AI ambitions. (Wired $)
+ Anthropic says the deal will double Claude Code’s rate limits. (Ars Technica)
+It’s also exploring building compute capacity in space. (CNBC)
+ Musk previously called Anthropic “evil” and “misanthropic.” (Gizmodo)

2 Ex-OpenAI leaders say Sam Altman sowed “chaos” and distrust
Former CTO Mira Murati said she couldn’t trust his words. (The Verge)
+ He also bypassed OpenAI’s safety board before a model release. (Gizmodo)
+ And pitted leaders against one another. (Forbes)
+ But Elon Musk still tried to recruit Altman to lead a Tesla AI lab. (FT $)
+ Here’s why Musk and Altman are in court. (MIT Technology Review)

3 China’s humanoid robots are fueling its next export boom
Morgan Stanley says Beijing has taken an early lead in the sector. (Bloomberg $)
+ Gig workers are training humanoids at home. (MIT Technology Review)

4 SpaceX’s IPO plans will give Elon Musk “virtually unchecked” authority
And erode typical shareholder protections. (Reuters $)
+ Activists and pension funds are pushing back against the IPO. (Wired $)
+ While SpaceX is shifting focus from Falcon 9 to Starship. (Ars Technica)

5 Google DeepMind will use the MMORPG Eve Online for AI model testing
It’s also bought a stake in the game’s maker. (Ars Technica)
+ DeepMind also recently built a new video-game-playing agent. (MIT Technology Review)

6 The US risks isolating its automakers by banning a Chinese EV standard
It’s prohibiting software that’s dominating global EV markets. (Rest of World)

7 Elon Musk’s proposed Texas chip factory could cost $119 billion
It would manufacture chips for Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI. (CNBC)
+ Future AI chips could be built on glass. (MIT Technology Review)

8 Why the “attention-span crisis” is misunderstood
Technology may be exhausting attention rather than shortening it. (Atlantic $)

9 Scientists are getting closer to explaining what causes lightning
New tools are revealing unexpected physics inside thunderstorms. (Quanta)

10 Kids have found an age verification loophole: fake mustaches
Resourceful children are foiling blocks on adult websites. (TechCrunch)

Quote of the day

“My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and completely the opposite to another person.”

—Mira Murati, the former CTO of OpenAI, testifies ‌in court that CEO Sam Altman was deceptive, Reuters reports.

One More Thing


A brief, weird history of brainwashing

During the Cold War, the US prepared for a psychic war with the Soviet Union and China by spending millions of dollars on research into manipulating the human brain. 

The science never exactly panned out, but residual beliefs fostered by this bizarre conflict continue to play a role in ideological and scientific debates to this day. And now, new technologies are altering how we think about mind control. 

This is how the race for mind control changed America forever.

—Annalee Newitz

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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The balcony solar boom is coming to the US
Tech/AI

The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

Dozens of US states are considering legislation to allow people to install plug-in solar systems, often called balcony solar. These small arrays require little to no setup and could help cut emissions and power bills.

Balcony solar is already popular in Europe, and proponents say that the systems could make solar power more accessible for more people in the US, including renters. As popularity rises, though, some experts caution that there are safety concerns with how balcony solar would work with existing electrical equipment in homes.

Let’s talk about what balcony solar is, why it’s unique, and how new testing requirements could affect our progress toward deploying the technology in the US.

Plug-in solar systems are designed to be simple to install, often requiring no electrician or specialized worker at all. They’re small, and many can be plugged into existing outlets.

People across Germany have installed over a million balcony solar systems. They generally measure up to roughly two square meters or about 20 square feet, and can generate up to 800 watts—enough to power a standard microwave.

Now the plug-in solar wave is coming to the US. Many Americans have already installed DIY balcony solar without the permission of their utilities—it’s something of a regulatory gray area. In late 2025, Utah became the first state to explicitly allow people to install and use balcony solar systems. Over two dozen other states are now considering similar legislation.

Generally, utilities require users to sign an interconnection agreement before they can plug in large arrays of solar panels that generate power for the grid. There can be fees and permits, and it all amounts to an expensive and lengthy process.

Utah’s law ditched the interconnection requirement for panels that have a low power cap and that are certified by a national testing facility. (Legislation under consideration in other states, including New York, includes the same requirements.) The thinking is that since the panels produce very little power, which would be used to meet a home’s own energy demand and probably not get sent back to the grid, the same requirements shouldn’t apply. 

As for that certification piece, in January the national testing and certification lab UL Solutions released UL 3700, a testing protocol to certify balcony solar systems and ensure that they’re safe. 

There are three main safety considerations to address for these plug-in solar systems, says Joseph Bablo, manager of principal engineering, energy, and industrial automation at UL Solutions. First, there’s the possibility of overloading a circuit. Generally, electrical circuits have circuit breakers, which can trip and interrupt current if necessary. But if there’s a solar panel adding extra power to a circuit, a traditional breaker might not be able to respond to overload. Over time, overloaded circuits can damage equipment or even start a fire. 

Second, these small systems are typically installed on the outside of homes, and outdoor power outlets generally have ground fault circuit interruption (GFCI). Basically, if an outlet or its surroundings are wet, it can shut down to prevent electric shock. Many GFCI systems may not work if there’s power going back into an outlet from a solar panel.

Finally, there’s touch safety: If a plug gets disconnected from the wall, the blades of the plug may still have power running through them for a short time. If a panel is getting sunlight, those blades could be energized for longer than is typical.

The new UL Solutions testing framework aims to address these concerns. One of the key recommendations is that plug-in solar panels should use a special outlet that’s designed specifically for them. The safety measures included in that connection, and within a panel, would ensure that the panels are safe.

The need for a special outlet means that currently, people who want to plug in a solar panel array would probably need to have an electrician come and update their wiring in order to comply with the protocol, Bablo says. “I know they want to say ‘No electrician, no permits’—we’re not there.”

Today, anyone can buy products like solar panels and inverters, some of which carry their own component UL certifications, and string them together. (Inverters are covered under UL 1741, for example.)

But the gold standard is to have an entire system that meets the safety requirements, and that means adhering to the new standard, Bablo says. As of early May, there aren’t any plug-in solar systems that have been fully certified by UL Solutions. And Bablo said he couldn’t share information about what, if any, are in the pipeline.  

Even with the new certification requirements, Bablo still thinks plug-in solar still has the potential to help more people access the technology. “There’s a way for it to work, but we want it to work safely,” he says.

This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. 

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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EU weighs restricting use of U.S. cloud platforms to process sensitive government data, sources tell CNBC
Economy

EU weighs restricting use of U.S. cloud platforms to process sensitive government data, sources tell CNBC

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

The flags of the European Union fly in front of the European Parliament.
Philipp von Ditfurth | dpa | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

The European Union is considering rules that would restrict its member governments’ use of U.S. cloud providers to handle sensitive data, sources familiar with the talks told CNBC.

The European Commission — the EU’s executive branch — is expected to present its “Tech Sovereignty Package” on May 27, which will include a range of measures aimed at bolstering the bloc’s strategic autonomy in key digital areas.

As part of preparations for that package, discussions are taking place within the Commission around limiting the exposure of sensitive public-sector data to cloud platforms provided by companies outside of the EU, two Commission officials, who asked to remain anonymous as they weren’t authorized to discuss private talks, told CNBC.

As tensions with U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration have intensified, there have been calls for Europe to diversify away from U.S. cloud providers, which currently dominate the European market, and towards homegrown providers for its most critical workloads.

“The core idea is defining sectors that have to be hosted on European cloud capacity,” one of the officials said. They added that companies providing cloud solutions from third countries, including the U.S., could be impacted.

Proposals would not prohibit overseas companies’ cloud platforms from government contracts entirely, but limit their use in processing sensitive data at public sector organizations, depending on the level of sensitivity, they added. The officials said that talks are ongoing and yet to be finalized.

“U.S. cloud providers could face restrictions in certain sensitive and strategic sectors” within EU member states’ public bodies as a result of the proposals, one official said.

The officials told CNBC there are discussions around proposing that financial, judicial and health data processed by governments and public-sector organizations require high levels of sovereign cloud infrastructure.

The discussions do not relate to private-sector companies and the “Tech Sovereignty Package” would not propose rules about their use of cloud platforms, one of the officials said.

Once presented by the Commission, the package would need to be greenlit by all 27 member states. The “Tech Sovereignty Package” will include the Cloud and AI Development Act (CADA) and the Chips Act 2.0, bills aimed at encouraging sovereign, homegrown solutions and products in both of those areas.

When asked for comment, a Commission spokesperson told CNBC the package was “about Europe waking up and getting its act together.”

They added that it would “improve opportunities for sovereign cloud offerings, including through public procurement, and support the entry into the market of a more diverse set of cloud and AI service providers.”

Growing calls to diversify

EU member states’ public sector organizations can currently use cloud platforms provided by overseas companies — often U.S.-based due to the country’s dominance in the sector — to process highly sensitive data, including health and financial data, provided they comply with regulations.

But scrutiny on that reliance has grown as transatlantic relations have soured in recent months. Under the 2018 Cloud Act, U.S. law enforcement can request user data from American companies, regardless of where the data is stored.

European governments told CNBC in February they were exploring homegrown and open-source alternatives to U.S. tech platforms and upping budgets for digital sovereignty.

France announced it would roll out Visio in January — a video conferencing tool developed by the government — which it said would be available to all state services by 2027, in place of U.S. tools like Microsoft Teams and Zoom.

The same month, the EU said it faced a “significant problem of dependence on non-EU countries in the digital sphere…potentially creating vulnerabilities, including in critical sectors.”

In April, the Commission awarded a 180 million euro tender to four European sovereign cloud projects to supply EU institutions and agencies, with one of those involving a partnership with a joint venture between French aerospace company Thales and Google Cloud.

Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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Islamic State-linked women arrive home in Australia from Syria
Global

Islamic State-linked women arrive home in Australia from Syria

by admin May 7, 2026
written by admin

On Wednesday police commissioner Krissy Barratt confirmed some of the women would be arrested and charged. The potential charges included terrorism offences such as entering, or remaining in, declared areas, and crimes against humanity offences, such as engaging in slave trading.

May 7, 2026 0 comments
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