Europe does not build the world’s most powerful AI systems. It does not dominate cloud infrastructure. It does not control the flow of capital that fuels the current wave of artificial intelligence. And yet, in an unexpected twist of technological geopolitics, it may still determine how that intelligence is governed.
While Silicon Valley scales and China integrates, Europe legislates.
This is not a fallback strategy. It is a deliberate bet—that in a world defined by algorithmic power, the ability to set the rules may prove as consequential as the ability to build the systems themselves.
“The AI Act is not the end of the journey, but the starting point for a new governance where technology is at the service of people. We are not just regulating; we are setting a global standard for trustworthy AI.”.
Thierry Breton
European Commissioner for the Internal Market
Breton’s assertion reflects Europe’s ambition to transform regulatory capacity into geopolitical influence. The question is whether that ambition can translate into real power in a landscape dominated by technological giants.
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There is something quietly disorienting about the numbers. Thousands of roles are being phased out. Entire functions are declared obsolete. And yet, the total number of employees at SAP remains largely unchanged. On the surface, it looks like continuity. Stability, even. But beneath that surface, something else is happening.
This is not a reduction of work. It is a replacement of its internal logic. What is being reshaped is not the workforce itself, but the structure through which work exists. A form of what could be described as ghost turnover—where the visible organism remains intact, while its internal composition is quietly exchanged.
Roles do not simply disappear. They are rewritten. Functions do not vanish. They are absorbed into systems. And slowly, almost imperceptibly, the identity of the organization begins to shift.
What once defined enterprise software was its position in relation to human action.
Systems were built to support decisions, not to make them. They structured workflows, enforced rules and ensured consistency—but always within a framework defined elsewhere. The human remained the origin of intent.
That boundary is now dissolving.
With the emergence of AI-driven layers, including agents like SAP Joule, interaction itself begins to change. The system is no longer navigated—it is addressed. Intent replaces instruction. Outcome replaces process.
What follows from this shift is subtle but profound: the system does not just execute work—it begins to shape the conditions under which work exists.
“We are entering a phase where AI is no longer a feature of software, but its architecture. This means we are not just redefining jobs, but the underlying logic of how an enterprise operates.”
Christian Klein, CEO, SAP
The implication is not simply technological. It is morphological. Work is no longer something that flows through a system. It is something that is increasingly formed by it.
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In a business district in Frankfurt, a 5G antenna quietly handles thousands of simultaneous connections—video streams, cloud applications, industrial data. The network works, but not effortlessly. Capacity is stretched, margins are thin and the next upgrade is already being discussed before the current one has fully paid off.
The infrastructure may be European—engineered, deployed and regulated locally—but the logic governing much of the data flowing through it originates far beyond the continent.
Across Europe, similar scenes are unfolding. The infrastructure is in place, but the system behind it is under pressure.
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As artificial intelligence enters education, care and social work, the nature of these professions becomes clearer. Not efficiency, but presence defines them. This essay explores why human judgment, context and relationships remain essential in an increasingly system-driven world.
As artificial intelligence generates fluent text instantly, writing is no longer the same act of thinking it once was. This essay explores how language education must shift from producing sentences to interpreting meaning, authorship and responsibility in an age of generated words.
Artificial intelligence is transforming legal work, but not legal judgment. As analysis and drafting become automated, the core of law remains human—requiring interpretation, responsibility and the ability to justify decisions under conditions of uncertainty.
In digital environments, identity is increasingly shaped by design. From interfaces and avatars to algorithmic aesthetics, the self is no longer simply expressed but constructed—raising new questions about agency, authenticity and how we see ourselves.