view the rest of the comments
Buy European
Overview:
The community to discuss buying European goods and services.
Rules:
-
Be kind to each other, and argue in good faith. No direct insults nor disrespectful and condescending comments.
-
Do not use this community to promote Nationalism/Euronationalism. This community is for discussing European products/services and news related to that. For other topics the following might be of interest:
-
Include a disclaimer at the bottom of the post if you're affiliated with the recommendation.
-
No russian suggestions.
Feddit.uk's instance rules apply:
- No racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia or xenophobia.
- No incitement of violence or promotion of violent ideologies.
- No harassment, dogpiling or doxxing of other users.
- Do not share intentionally false or misleading information.
- Do not spam or abuse network features.
- Alt accounts are permitted, but all accounts must list each other in their bios.
- No generative AI content.
Useful Websites
-
General BuyEuropean product database: https://buy-european.net/ (relevant post with background info)
-
Switching your tech to European TLDR: https://better-tech.eu/tldr/ (relevant post)
-
Buy European meta website with useful links: https://gohug.eu/ (relevant post)
Benefits of Buying Local:
local investment, job creation, innovation, increased competition, more redundancy.
European Instances
Lemmy:
-
Basque Country: https://lemmy.eus/
-
🇧🇪 Belgium: https://0d.gs/
-
🇧🇬 Bulgaria: https://feddit.bg/
-
Catalonia: https://lemmy.cat/
-
🇩🇰 Denmark, including Greenland (for now): https://feddit.dk/
-
🇪🇺 Europe: https://europe.pub/
-
🇫🇷🇧🇪🇨🇭 France, Belgium, Switzerland: https://jlai.lu/
-
🇩🇪🇦🇹🇨🇭🇱🇮 Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Lichtenstein: https://feddit.org/
-
🇫🇮 Finland: https://sopuli.xyz/ & https://suppo.fi/
-
🇮🇸 Iceland: https://feddit.is/
-
🇮🇹 Italy: https://feddit.it/
-
🇱🇹 Lithuania: https://group.lt/
-
🇳🇱 Netherlands: https://feddit.nl/
-
🇵🇱 Poland: https://fedit.pl/ & https://szmer.info/
-
🇵🇹 Portugal: https://lemmy.pt/
-
🇸🇮 Slovenia: https://gregtech.eu/
-
🇸🇪 Sweden: https://feddit.nu/
-
🇹🇷 Turkey: https://lemmy.com.tr/
-
🇬🇧 UK: https://feddit.uk/
Friendica:
-
🇦🇹 Austria: https://friendica.io/
-
🇮🇹 Italy: https://poliverso.org/
-
🇩🇪 Germany: https://piratenpartei.social/ & https://anonsys.net/
-
🇫🇷 Significant French speaking userbase: https://social.trom.tf/
-
🇵🇱 Poland: soc.citizen4.eu
Matrix:
-
🇬🇧 UK: matrix.org & glasgow.social
-
🇫🇷 France: tendomium & imagisphe.re & hadoly.fr
-
🇩🇪 Germany: tchncs.de, catgirl.cloud, pub.solar, yatrix.org, digitalprivacy.diy, oblak.be, nope.chat, envs.net, hot-chilli.im, synod.im & rollenspiel.chat
-
🇳🇱 Netherlands: bark.lgbt
-
🇦🇹 Austria: gemeinsam.jetzt & private.coffee
-
🇫🇮 Finland: pikaviestin.fi & chat.blahaj.zone
Related Communities:
Buy Local:
Continents:
European:
Buying and Selling:
Boycott:
Countries:
Companies:
Stop Publisher Kill Switch in Games Practice:
Banner credits: BYTEAlliance
I'm always excited by these kinds of headlines! I hope they stick with open source and don't switch back.
The best thing about this is that eventually these organizations are going to want features and fixes that don't exist yet in the open source software they're using, at which point they'll have to invest in development. If this becomes a trend I think it will mean more stability and more functionality in open software in general.
Not just that, it's also beneficial to the organization because that can just.. implement it themselves, and then do a pull request, instead of being reliant upon a corporation to care about your desires. Literally a win-win. I hope state actors come to realize that sooner rather than later, it only makes sense
I look forward to EU Linux.
SUSE, Manjaro, Alpine Linux, CRUX, and NixOS are all technically European (as are many others).
Mint is also european (based on Ireland), even though it's based on Ubuntu and Debian, ~~both of which are American (but Debian is FOSS)~~
Edit: Ubuntu is based on London and was founded by South Africans, but has propietary snaps (disabled on Mint). Debian was founded by an American but is FOSS so it operates worldwide.
All FOSS operates worldwide; the point of FOSS is that it provides a paradigm that directly counters the false-scarcity that (often capitalist) systems induce.
(not directed at you, of course)
And Mint has heavily invested in a version that goes to Debian skipping Ubuntu, I think it should have reached stable status by now.
Isn't Ubuntu South African?
The word yes
The company no, it's British or something
Guix, btw.
Sure, but I mean a distro developed/maintained/curated officially by the EU or one of its member governments.
I'm all for it, but I am not sure any more wath the political trend on surveillance.
I'm not overly concerned with an organization trying to build surveillance functions into an open source operating system.
Hard pass. I’m not interested in any software curated by a western government.
Or eastern for that matters
ah, well then, RedStar OS is for you!
I'm not sure a government can have the agility necessary for keeping a good track of good decisions over a reasonable amount of time.
I'd bet it would take a planification similar to building a nuclear reactor or an airport: over budget, blown over scheduled time, fulfilling specs on paper but not in spirit, and used only when people have no other option ( goes without saying all governments are a monopoly, you can't have 2 bodies having powers over a particular geographic place).
On the other hand, a government organization might do a better job of keeping track of development goals over time. It might be slower than independent open source projects, but it would probably also be more stable than most Linux distros. Enterprise-level software has different requirements and different development cycles from consumer-level software. Having a competing option for Red Hat could only be a good thing.
It's not as if they'd be starting from scratch, it would most likely still be Linux. But they might bring more focus to long-term stability and especially cybersecurity implementations to meet government security requirements.
You can help here: https://eu-os.eu/
Hungary has vetoed that USB stick.