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You are at:Home»Technology»2026: Europe’s Digital Watershed
modern technology

2026: Europe’s Digital Watershed

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Posted By sme-admin on November 11, 2025 Technology

Ben Schilz, CEO at Wire, predicts movements towards a sovereign Europe, quantum-ready encryption and a slow goodbye to Big Tech

The digital tug-of-war between open-source and proprietary software is not only underway but determined to accelerate in 2026. After years of loud promises but lacking delivery, the world has woken up. Privacy, sovereignty and security aren’t just firmly on the agenda, they are a long-term necessity to ensure companies and nations secure and control their data. However, not everyone is on the same page and frankly, many have competing interests.

In the name of safety, governments continue to push for deeper access into our digital lives, whether at work or in the home. The EU’s vote on ChatControl may have been delayed, but the debate is far from over. The coming year will bring sharper clashes between states seeking surveillance powers and organisations determined to defend the principle of encryption and privacy rights.

While these debates rage on, the private sector faces a reckoning on multiple fronts. Enterprises are rethinking just how convenient big tech is, encryption takes a quantum leap forward and now that the novelty of AI has worn off, there are some serious questions that need to be answered about control and trust.  

  1. 2026 will test the limits of digital privacy. 

Europe’s debate around ChatControl is only one front. Governments worldwide are advancing new surveillance mandates: the UK’s Online Safety Act implementation, France’s Loi SREN, India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act, and Australia’s push for Client-Side Scanning. Each expands state access to private communications under the guise of safety.

The pattern is clear: privacy-preserving encryption is being reframed as an obstacle to law enforcement. If these trends converge, they could normalise mass scanning and end-to-end backdoors. Enterprises relying on secure collaboration must now evaluate whether their providers can withstand such regulatory pressure. Technically, legally, and politically.

In 2026, defending privacy moves from advocacy to architecture. Vendors must prove they can deliver both compliance and confidentiality, without compromise.

  1. Digital Sovereignty Becomes Law, Not Vision

 2026 marks the turning point: sovereignty stops being a political buzzword and becomes procurement reality. NIS2, DORA, and frameworks like SecNumCloud are now enforceable; buyers in government and critical industries can only choose vendors fully under EU control.The misconception: “EU hosting equals EU sovereignty.” Wrong. A European data centre owned by an American parent remains under US law. True sovereignty demands legal, operational, and infrastructural independence. The new buyer question: Who truly controls our data? In 2026, that question decides every contract.

  1. Encryption Evolves: From End-to-End to Post-Quantum

 End-to-end encryption used to be the gold standard. In 2026, it’s table stakes. The future is open, scalable, and quantum-resistant. The IETF’s new Messaging Layer Security (MLS) standard marks the industry’s biggest leap since TLS  and it’s designed to be post-quantum ready. It replaces proprietary, closed encryption schemes with verifiable, interoperable cryptography that can evolve to resist quantum threats. Wire leads this transition as the first enterprise collaboration platform running MLS in production. As quantum computing moves closer, closed encryption will become technical debt. The winners will be those building on open, auditable, and quantum-proof foundations.

  1. Collaboration Becomes a Core Attack Vector

 Phishing, credential theft, and supply chain compromise remain top attack methods and increasingly exploit collaboration tools as entry points. Shared channels with partners, guest access, and integrated calendars connect external threats to internal systems. Yet most organisations still overlook collaboration in their security posture.

With NIS2 and DORA raising the bar, securing these interfaces and isolating sensitive communication from exposed platforms is no longer optional.

  1. Europe Unbundles Big Tech 

Across Europe, CIOs and CISOs are quietly dismantling their dependency on American platforms. The age of the monolith is ending. Sovereign IT now means modular, interoperable, and vendor-agnostic stacks. Secure messaging platforms, sovereign file-sharing services, and Europe-based hosting providers are replacing one-size-fits-all suites. This isn’t protectionism; it’s operational resilience. Lock-in is the new systemic risk. But Big Tech will not stand by. Expect intensified lobbying in Brussels and national capitals to slow or water down sovereignty efforts. The fight for an independent European tech ecosystem is only beginning and it demands public awareness. Enterprises, policymakers, and citizens must understand what’s at stake: Europe’s ability to control its digital future. The next wave of infrastructure must be federated, transparent, and sovereign by design or it won’t be European at all.

  1. AI Meets Security: The Sovereign Intelligence Era

 AI is transforming collaboration but without sovereignty, it becomes surveillance. In 2026, privacy and control define whether AI strengthens or undermines trust. The EU AI Act now forces enterprises to know where models run, what data they access, and who governs them. True sovereign AI keeps intelligence and data under the same legal and operational roof, no external models scanning messages, no transatlantic data flow, no opaque training pipelines. The next frontier of digital sovereignty isn’t just who builds AI, but who controls it.

New challenges and innovations mean that the rate of change is accelerating year-on-year. These changes are not abstract. They will decide who controls data, who sets standards and who leads in the next era of technology. Nations and enterprises that plan ahead, choose wisely and invest in resilient digital foundations will be ready for what comes next. The rest will find the future decided for them.

Europe and its organisations stand at a defining moment. Decisions made now will shape how we communicate, collaborate and compete for years to come. The choice ahead is clear, participant or spectator?

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