Questions of digital sovereignty or strategic autonomy
have long been confined to purely legal aspects embodied
in the numerous so-called extraterritorial foreign laws,
whose primary objective was often to address domestic
security issues of the countries that authored them with
the United States remaining the dominant actor given
its hegemony in Europe. These texts, often predating
current digital offerings, have over the years become
veritable ‘licences to spy’, with many companies and
executives having been their targets in the past, and
still being so today.

[WHITE PAPER] Mastering our digital dependencies
pdf 1.9 MB
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