Archived (available only in Dutch)

Reijer Passchier, Assistant Professor in Constitutional Law, warns against copying the destructive tech-giant model that exists in the US and China. He proposes developing European tech companies to ensure that Europe retains its sovereignty, according to a commentary in the Dutch newspaper ‘De Volkskrant’ [only in Dutch, but you’ll find a useful translation].

To limit the influence of US and Chinese tech giants, Europe will have to try to repel such companies while making plans for its own tech industry. According to Reijer Passchier, big tech in the US has led to unprecedented inequality of wealth and the state has little control over these companies. Tech giants are willing to innovate, but only when this is to their advantage. If not, they will go all out to stop competitors threatening their business model. Elon Musk is an example of their powerful position. At the same time, problems arise from mixing public and private interests and the interests of the companies often take precedence over those of society. In China, the state is able to control the tech giants through its authoritarian political system and strict control over internet access.

‘Europe must avoid allowing such fundamental risks to arise.’ Passchier says that Europe has the means to develop both technical and institutional opportunities that are both democratic and in line with the rule of law. As an example, Passchier mentions the messaging app Signal – a company that uses technology to serve society, without putting profits first. More information?

  • Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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    6 days ago

    This is somewhat related:

    New Open Source AI model beats DeepSeek’s performance using just 14% of the data its Chinese competitor needed

    A team of international researchers from leading academic institutions and tech companies upended the AI reasoning landscape on Wednesday with a new model that matched—and occasionally surpassed—one of China’s most sophisticated AI systems: DeepSeek.

    OpenThinker-32B, developed by the Open Thoughts consortium, achieved a 90.6% accuracy score on the MATH500 benchmark, edging past DeepSeek’s 89.4%.

    The model also outperformed DeepSeek on general problem-solving tasks, scoring 61.6 on the GPQA-Diamond benchmark compared to DeepSeek’s 57.6. On the LCBv2 benchmark, it hit a solid 68.9, showing strong performance across diverse testing scenarios.

    • General_Effort@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Related how? Looks like you wouldn’t be allowed to use such a model for other than research purposes in the EU.