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Commission launches market investigations on cloud computing services under the Digital Markets Act https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_25_...

> Two market investigations will assess whether Amazon and Microsoft should be designated as gatekeepers for their cloud computing services, Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, under the DMA, in other words whether they act as important gateways between businesses and consumers, despite not meeting the DMA gatekeeper thresholds for size, user number and market position.


> AWS European Sovereign Cloud is located in the state of Brandenburg, Germany, and is generally available today.

Appears to be in Massen: https://www.lr-online.de/lausitz/finsterwalde/investition-in...


Dear smart people on HN, what do you make of this? I understand most of you are US based. Is that Amazon getting ready for serious trade war, US/EU?

EU, as a US citizen, go all in and ditch the US as much as you can. Not only will this bring competition, it also means that the US Government cannot grab the balls of Amazon and squeeze the EU market.

I wouldn't trust Amazon with my data if I was an EU citizen. As a US citizen I don't even trust Amazon with my own data. This is why I support de-Google, de-Microsoft, and de-Apple computing.


It is an attempt to not lose European customers that might be tempted to migrate to Europe-based solutions in the current political climate. In the event of a serious trade war (like you suggested) and/or a real war, it gives some assurances; which is smart based on the threats from the current unpredictable and authoritarian U.S. administration.

But it probably started as a way to comply with EU laws more easily, so it works on multiple levels.


How much can we trust this so-called sovereign cloud? That's a sincere question. I can't think of a more American company than Amazon, and I find it hard to believe that it could be completely independent from its American headquarters.

I really hope that Europe will get its act together rather than relying on this half-hearted solution.


They claim the "AWS European Sovereign Cloud represents a physically and logically separate cloud infrastructure, with all components located entirely within the EU" and that it operates entirely under German laws, but I think your skepticism is warranted.

I think Europe should push for its own solutions rather than fuel oligarchy/authoritarianism, if they are serious about their own security and preserving liberal values.


If you think deeply and logically, you will see that those text and even some legal details are just marketing that aims smart people. because in case of war or some serious conflict, they will be obeying the parent company and orders of usa government. see ICJ prosecutors and microsoft, you have real proof live, if you can connect some dots.

Physically separate infrastructure as well as local employees help to some extent. But it is not really sovereign cloud. There is no guarantee that employees would know if some commands are illegal. Plus parent company can fly anyone there if needed.

Plus some staff could be dual citizens with loyalty to the US

Not at all. Trump applies any leverage he can. "Nice US cloud you've got there... would be a shame if anything happened to it..."

It has already been discussed here a bit: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46640462

They’ve been planning this for a while. These datacentres and organisations don’t spring up overnight, especially at this scale.

I know at least one major European bank made it a requirement upon AWS to provide essentially this service. I believe back around 2020 or maybe a bit earlier.



Same!



Robert W. Malone sounds like an accomplished scientist in Grokipedia and a fraud in Wikipedia. For the ground truth I might start by reading both and asking an LLM for the diff.

Interesting that Grok in Fast mode says that the Wikipedia version is more neutral, but Expert mode says that about the Grokipedia version.

Now that you can cheaply insert a new ideological lens and generate a new version of Wikipedia, I expect to see lots of them. But it seems more sensible to just have the alternative LLMs generate alternative articles on demand rather than materializing the whole thing.


Or, you could start by using tertiary sources correctly and follow the citations and read the sources they depend on, rather than using a hallucination machine to build something even farther from the ground truth from the already-distant sources.


It looks like that goes both ways.

The Jimmy Wales Wikipedia page doesn’t have a section for controversies or anything.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Wales

https://grokipedia.com/page/Jimmy_Wales


They do have https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Wikipedia and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wikipedia_controversie... . They're just filed under Wikipedia itself rather than the founders profile.


"Every society is built on stories; those who control the narrative control the people." – Noam Chomsky


I was looking for a nice browser game, just judging by the name.


I can relate - running a small hosting business. People come up with too complex solutions. They solve problems that they'd wish to have. For instance: HA setups are complex. If not done correctly, like in most cases, people don't gain the additional '9' from the SLA.


An Obsidian vault can be a Git repo. Obsidian recently launched data tables. Consider plugin security (supply chain attacks).


I looked into this last year. Obsidian is great but it's really not intended for a team. There's no permissions system, for example. There is a way to create a shared vault, but it's shared entirely or not at all. No way to share a single section or page.


My sympathies! I developed a small CSS frameworks many moons ago [1]. It provided basic styling for elements directly and used the cascading part of CSS a lot. I see the benefits of utility classes and how it fits to web components.

[1] - https://medium.com/teutonic-css/retiring-my-own-little-css-f...


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