
How Eurostack could offer Canada a route to digital independence from the United States
Perhaps because of Canada's proximity to the United States, coupled with its positive shared history with the U.S. and their highly integrated economies, Canada went along for that consumerist ride.
The experience was different on the other side of the Atlantic. The Stasi in the former East Germany and the KGB under Josef Stalin maintained files on hundreds of thousands of citizens to identify and prosecute dissidents.
Having witnessed this invasion of privacy and its weaponization first-hand, Europe has been far ahead of North America in developing protections. These include the General Data Protection Regulation and the Law Enforcement Directive, with protection of personal data also listed in the European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights.
Canada clearly took too much for granted in its relationship with the U.S. Suddenly, Canada is being threatened with tariffs and President Donald Trump's expressed desire to make Canada the 51st American state.
This has fuelled the motivation of Canada both internally and in co-operation with western European governments to seek greater independence in trade and military preparedness by diversifying its relationships.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has begun promoting "nation-building projects," but little attention has been paid to Canada's digital infrastructure.
Three recent developments suggest Canada would be well-advised to start paying close attention:
1. The current U.S. administration has raised concerns about its reliability as a partner and friend to Canada. Most of the concerns raised in Canada have been economic. However, Curtis McCord, a former national security and technology researcher for the Canadian government, has said the current situation has created vulnerabilities for national security as well:
"With Washington becoming an increasingly unreliable ally, Mr. Carney is right to look for ways to diversify away from the U.S. But if Canada wants to maintain its sovereignty and be responsible for its national security, this desire to diversify must extend to the U.S. domination of Canada's digital infrastructure."
2. Silicon Valley is exhibiting a newfound loyalty to Trump. The photo of the "broligarchy" at Trump's inauguration spoke volumes, as their apparent eagerness to appease the president brings the data gathered by the internet's surveillance-based economy under state control.
3. Trump's recent executive order entitled " Stopping waste, fraud and abuse by eliminating information silos" is alarming. The order became operational when the Trump administration contracted with Palantir, a company known for its surveillance software and data analytics in military contexts. Its job? To combine databases from both the state and federal levels into one massive database that includes every American citizen, and potentially any user of the internet.
Combining multiple government databases is concerning. Combining them with all the personal data harvested by Silicon Valley and providing them to a government showing all the hallmarks of an authoritarian regime sounds like Big Brother has arrived.
Civil liberties groups such as the Electronic Freedom Foundation, academics and even former Palantir employees have raised alarms about the possibilities for abuse, including the launch of all the vendettas Trump and his supporters have pledged to undertake.
European governments have attempted to rein in Silicon Valley's excesses for years. Trump's re-election and his moves toward potentially weaponizing internet data have further boosted Europe's resolve to move away from the U.S.-led internet.
One newer effort is Eurostack. A joint initiative involving academics, policymakers, companies and governments, it envisions an independent digital ecosystem that better reflects European values - democratic, sovereign, inclusive, transparent, respectful of personal privacy and innovation-driven.
Spokesperson Francesca Bria explains the "stack" arises from the idea that a digitally sovereign internet needs to have European control from the ground up.
That includes the acquisition of raw materials and manufacture and operation of the physical components that comprise computers and servers; the cloud infrastructure that has the processing power and storage to be operational at scale; the operating systems and applications that comprise the user interface; the AI models and algorithms that drive services and its policy and governance framework.
Prospective gains to Europe are considerable. They include greater cybersecurity, promoting innovation, keeping high-end creative jobs in Europe, promoting collaboration on equitable terms and creating high-skilled employment opportunities.
Canada receives no mention in the Eurostack proposal to date, but the project is still very much in the developmental phase. Investment so far is in the tens of millions instead of the billions it will require.
Canada has a lot to offer and to gain from being part of the Eurostack initiative. With the project still taking shape, now is the perfect time to get on board.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Toronto Star
16 minutes ago
- Toronto Star
To Whom it May Concern: Trump's tariff letters cause a stir among world leaders
Ninety trade deals in 90 days didn't happen early in President Donald Trump's second term. 'Liberation Day' panicked the financial markets in April. And bespoke trade agreements with dozens of countries, he has said, takes too much time. 'There's 200 countries,'' the president acknowledged. 'You can't talk to all of them.'' So Trump repackaged his plan to slap tariffs on almost every nation in a series of unusual presidential letters to foreign leaders that set new thresholds not just for trade negotiations — but also for diplomatic style, tone and delivery. Most are fill-in-the-blank form letters that include leaders' names and a tariff rate. Words are capitalized using Trump's distinct social media style. A few typos and formatting issues appear throughout.


Global News
31 minutes ago
- Global News
‘Feels like death': Canadian-American separated from family, denied re-entry at border
For more than four decades, Canadian-born Christopher Landry has lived in the United States and holds a green card. The 46-year-old moved to America as a toddler, and now has a wife, five children, a job, and a home in New Hampshire. If you ask him where his allegiances lie, he describes it as split between the two countries. 'I'm a Can-American, I would say. I'm deeply rooted in my Canadian pride, and I also have a deep love for the United States as well,' he said. He visits family in New Brunswick annually, and this summer was no different. But when he tried to cross the border with two of his daughters in Houlton, Maine, last week to re-enter the U.S., he was stopped by border agents. 'Long story short, after three hours of interrogation … I was told to turn around and seek a pathway to have my case reviewed by an immigration judge,' he said. Story continues below advertisement Landry says the agents had questioned him about prior convictions from 2004 and 2007, which were related to cannabis possession and driving with a suspended licence. 2:41 Know your rights when crossing the Canada-US border He says he was told if he tries to go back to the U.S. again, he will be detained while waiting for the case to be heard — which could take months or even years. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'There's really no easy pathway to an immigration judge outside of the country. And the quickest pathway right now is through detainment. And that's a scary thought in itself,' he said. 'So I'm looking for a legal pathway to try to get this exonerated and be able to go back to the U.S.' His daughters have since been able to re-enter the U.S, but he remains in Grand-Barachois, N.B., and is staying with his grandmother for now. He's also concerned about getting back to his job, and earning income for them. Story continues below advertisement 'It feels like death. It's hard. I miss them a lot,' he said about his wife and children. 'Can't even think about it. I just got to stay focused on what I got to do.' Landry says he's made many trips since 2007 and he wasn't aware this could be an issue. In the meantime, he's been fielding calls from lawyers and his senator to try to find a way out of this mess. 'I'm a third-generation green card holder. We've always lived as green card holders in peace and alongside with all our American neighbours,' he said. 'And we never felt threatened as far as our status was concerned. ' His grandmother, Clara, who also holds a green card said she was surprised this happened to her grandson. 'We travelled back and forth on a green card for 40 ears. Never had any trouble, they said, as long as we had the green card,' she said. 'We didn't need a passport. We don't need anything else.' Nova Scotia-based immigration lawyer Blair Hodgman, who does not represent Landry, says controlled substance convictions always meant people were inadmissible, but that there may be more careful attention nowadays. Story continues below advertisement 'If you have … controlled substance conviction, you're inadmissible and you're required to be detained. So I think the only difference is I guess they didn't catch on to it before,' said Hodgman. 'They probably weren't scrutinizing him, but now they're trying to catch everyone they can.' While Landry was not permitted to vote in the U.S. elections, he was a Donald Trump supporter. Since his story was made public, he says he's received negative comments from 'both sides' of the political spectrum. 'I don't agree with (Trump's) policies right now. He's hurting a lot of people and a lot people that haven't done anything wrong … people make mistakes but it's what you do after you make those mistakes that really counts,' he said. 'I don't support illegal immigration, I don't support breaking the law. All I wanted was a better economy and a better future for my kids, and it's, it's really a … we're feeling the backlash of it right now, and it's been hard.'


Ottawa Citizen
38 minutes ago
- Ottawa Citizen
Author Maria Reva's return to Ukraine inspired her to complete novel
In 2023, Maria Reva and her sister were on a train hurtling through a Ukrainian night toward the battle-scarred city of Kherson. They were hoping to reach their grandfather, still there in the midst of carnage. It was crisis time for Reva in more ways than one. The novel she had started to write back in Canada was in jeopardy: what she had originally envisaged as a lighthearted romp satirizing Ukraine's controversial 'romance' tours had been upended by Russian aggression. Article content Article content 'I initially felt I had two choices,' the award-winning Canadian writer says now. 'I could keep writing the novel as though nothing happened in real time. Or I could give up on it.' Article content Ultimately, she didn't give up. That return to Ukraine helped her find a way back in, and her debut novel, Endling, has now been published to international acclaim. Typical is the verdict of revered American novelist Percival Everett: 'I love works that are smarter than I am, and this is one.' He's talking about a daring, genre-bending achievement in which Reva herself becomes a recurring presence in the course of a fast-paced narrative. Article content 'I gave up on it multiple times,' she tells Postmedia from her home on Canada's West Coast. 'I honestly did not envisage any future for it beyond finishing it.' Article content In the midst of this struggle came the need to return to the embattled country of her birth. Reva was seven when she and her family emigrated to Canada in 1997. She had been back many time since — 'but I had a sense of terror when I thought of going to Ukraine this time.' Still, she would adjust to the psychology of a country under siege. Once there, as the sisters moved eastward in the hope of reaching their grandfather, 'the sense of danger became more and more normalized.' Yet danger was definitely present. Article content Article content 'On the train during the night, the conductor asked us to keep the blinds down so that we would not emit any light because trains had become a target for the Russians. The way that my sister and I thought of it was that we were in a closed moving coffin.' Article content The moment came when they could go no further. They would not reach the grandfather they loved. Article content 'It was very difficult accepting limitations on what I was capable of,' Reva says sombrely. 'I think that's why my fiction allows me the fantasy of going where I could not.' So a grandfather figure does play a seminal role in the novel she was able to complete. Article content Reva's lighter side surfaced on late-night television a few weeks ago with her cheerfully discussing the sex life of snails with NBC host Seth Meyers. She might have seemed light-years away from the horrors of Ukraine but in fact she was talking about the very same book, Endling, that had confronted her with so many challenges.