Europe loves the idea of speaking with one voice on artificial intelligence. It imagines itself as a unified digital bloc, capable of regulating, innovating and competing on equal terms. But behind the political speeches and shared legislation lies a reality that is far more complex: Europe does not inhabit one digital future — it inhabits twenty-seven.
Editorial
Editorial perspectives shaping how key developments in markets, technology, policy and society are interpreted.
Europe likes to present itself as the world’s moral anchor in the age of artificial intelligence. It wants to be the region where technology is shaped by human rights, democratic values and ethical principles rather than by Silicon Valley’s commercial logic or Beijing’s state-driven ambitions. On paper, that is a noble mission. But once you look closely at how Europe actually approaches AI — how laws are made, how member states behave and how uneven the digital landscape truly is — a far more complicated picture emerges.
Every major technological leap in history has reshaped the world long before society was ready for it. The industrial revolution transformed the way we worked, produced, travelled and lived — but it also brought decades of disruption, dislocation and uncertainty. Not because anyone intended harm, but because the speed of transformation outpaced the ability of people, institutions and governments to adapt.
As the world watches the relentless advance of technology, Europe often finds itself cast as the cautious sibling to the audacious innovators of Silicon Valley, the manufacturing behemoth of China or the strategic pivot points of Taiwan. But caution, in this case, may be a strength rather than a weakness.




