Europe launches open source strategy for digital sovereignty

The European Commission has initiated the European Open Digital Ecosystem Strategy, seeking input from experts and communities to enhance the EU's reliance on open source software. This move aims to reduce dependence on non-EU technologies and boost security and competitiveness. For PC gamers, it could mean greater support for Linux-based platforms like SteamOS.

The European Commission's new initiative, dubbed the European Open Digital Ecosystem Strategy, invites contributions from experts, companies, and open source communities to strengthen the EU's embrace of open technologies. Launched recently, it emphasizes open source as central to achieving technological sovereignty, enhancing security, and improving competitiveness by minimizing reliance on external software providers.

This strategy expands on the EU's previous Open Source Software Strategy, which operated from 2020 to 2023. That earlier effort focused on developing reusable digital solutions for government services, increasing open source adoption within EU institutions, and fostering a broader preference for open tools across the region. To coordinate these activities, the Commission established an Open Source Program Office to ensure practical implementation.

The Commission highlights the EU's heavy dependence on non-European software and platforms, which limits user choices, disadvantages local businesses, and poses security risks for critical infrastructure. In response, the strategy calls for more ambitious actions, including sustained funding and support for open source communities beyond short-term grants.

For PC gamers and Linux enthusiasts, these developments hold significant potential. Open source underpins key gaming technologies, such as drivers, game engines, Proton, Wine, and Linux distributions tailored for gaming like SteamOS, Bazzite, and Nobara. EU backing could lead to increased investments in research, public deployments, and hardware standards, such as RISC-V, improving compatibility and performance for devices like the Steam Deck and Lenovo Legion Go S.

Additionally, the strategy addresses broader concerns like privacy and online security. The EU has implemented an open source framework for age verification, promoting transparency, robust security through audits, and user choice in digital identity systems—issues increasingly relevant to online gaming. By supporting open standards, the initiative could pressure major vendors to enhance Linux compatibility and resist closed ecosystems, ultimately benefiting gamers' access to diverse, secure platforms.

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