For decades, Europe believed infrastructure had become invisible. The systems beneath society — energy grids, telecom networks, payment rails, logistics chains and computing infrastructure — were increasingly treated as technical layers that simply existed in the background. Citizens interacted with interfaces, not with the architectures beneath them. Convenience replaced awareness.
But the digital age has slowly exposed a different reality. Infrastructure was never neutral. It quietly became the operating system of economic power, political sovereignty and social organisation. The cloud determines where data flows. Payment systems determine how economies function. Algorithms shape visibility, behaviour and access. Undersea cables, hyperscale data centres and semiconductor supply chains now influence geopolitics as much as armies or natural resources once did.
The world is no longer organised around applications alone. It is increasingly organised around the infrastructures that determine what applications, markets and societies are allowed to become.
“Innovation is not just about the rate of change, but also its direction. Europe needs to stop being a ‘market fixer’ and start being a ‘market shaper.’ Infrastructure is the tool through which a society expresses its long-term purpose.”
Mariana Mazzucato, Professor of the Economics of Innovation and Public Value at University College London (UCL), in The Entrepreneurial State: Debunking Public vs. Private Sector Myths.
That shift is forcing countries and continents to answer a difficult question: who still possesses the ability to build long-term societal direction in the digital age?
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For centuries, money functioned primarily as a medium of exchange, a store of value and a unit of account. Banks moved capital. Ledgers recorded transactions. Financial institutions organised trust through visible structures built around contracts, balance sheets and human judgment. But increasingly, finance is becoming something else.
Inside digital financial systems, capital no longer merely moves through institutions. It moves through infrastructures capable of continuously interpreting behaviour, legitimacy, identity and economic intent.
The future of finance may therefore depend less on who owns the money — and increasingly on who controls the systems that assign meaning to it.
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Photonic chips promise something the electronic era increasingly struggles to deliver: more bandwidth, lower energy consumption and faster signal processing at scale. But beneath that promise sits a physical limitation. As Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) become more complex, their components are placed increasingly close together. Signals begin interfering with neighbouring modulators. Tiny disturbances become architectural constraints.
This phenomenon — electrical crosstalk — sounds microscopic. At scale, it becomes systemic. And as photonic systems move from dozens toward potentially thousands of components on a single chip, controlling that interference becomes one of the defining challenges of the next computational era.
A new publication by Bernat Molero Agudo and collaborators now demonstrates something important: DC electrical crosstalk inside Indium Phosphide (InP) photonic chips can be suppressed to the microvolt level.
That is not merely a technical refinement. It is a signal that Europe’s photonic infrastructure layer is becoming mature enough for large-scale deployment.
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Does something like a European truly exist? In this series, we explore how people across the continent see themselves—through work, income, identity and place—and what these portraits reveal about a Europe that is shared, yet never the same.
Europe increasingly debates infrastructure in terms of chips, cloud and AI. Yet beneath every technological system lies another layer that is far less visible: culture. Not as entertainment, but as the shared meaning, memory and public cohesion that allow democratic societies to remain socially recognizable at all.
Ireland transformed from a peripheral European economy into a globally connected technology and financial hub. This portrait explores how globalisation, postcolonial identity and American influence shape everyday life, revealing a society balancing rapid economic growth with questions of sovereignty and continuity.
Norway combines extraordinary energy wealth with strong social cohesion and political autonomy outside the European Union. This portrait explores how sovereignty, Arctic strategy and long-term planning shape everyday life, revealing a society balancing independence with deep European interdependence.