BuyFromEU

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Welcome to BuyFromEU - A community dedicated to supporting European-made goods and services!

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founded 3 months ago
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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by a887dcd7a@feddit.org to c/buyfromeu@feddit.org
 
 

In light of the #buyFromEU movement several databases and websites emerged around the idea of buying European, and local first. Coming from different communities overviews of products and services can (for example) be found at the following websites:

If you are using Firefox or Chrome (derivatives) you can be nudged to do better by using the open-source Go-European-Plugin:

If you really want to start and go European in your personal- or business-life, there are already some starting points and infopics circulating.

Coming from a technical perspective and in an ideal world, open-source solutions are preferable over walled gardens. Chosing them would - in the long run- ensure that you can swap services more easily at any time. But we need to be realistic and acknowledge, that some people are just searching for easy drop in replacements and services.

Just as a starting point, this is an selection of alternatives for digital services. It is not exhaustive, neither really opinionated. It shows the highlights and source where to find other solutions.

A selection of digital alternatives (WIP)

This list is a selection of few digital alternatives if you decide to buyFromEU (and friendlies). Links to other lists are appended for further reading.

Browsing

Searching

e-Mail/Office suite (gmail/outlook)

e-Mail clients

  • EU
    • vivaldi Browser with, calender and feed reader.
  • Considered friendly
  • Further infos

Instant Messaging Apps

Team-level communications

Passwordmanagers

VPN providers

Social media (obviously)

Maps and navigation

Shopping

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Getting an S22+ Ultra soon and as per usually I'm gonna get myself a Flip Case for it! Usually I'd go take a Cheapo one that'll last a Single year until the fake leather flakes off, but that does make me Wonder if there is a Better, European made and actually Quality Alternative?

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Does anyone knows and uses an alternative?

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wow nice! :O

from the site:

TLDR; Multiple countries in Europe are critically dependent on services provided by Microsoft. Querying mail-servers teaches that in some countries, over 70% of all public services rely on this American provider. Europe needs to build its own infrastructure, and open source is the most robust solution.

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i searched for https://eu-os.eu/ EU-OS and clicked on the search results that came up. there is a spanish article about this koncept https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/EU_OS here. in there i found this other article. that was funny because these two are nice but i didnt even look for them and just found them. and i dont habla espanol! :)

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Over the past few months, I embarked on a rewarding digital journey to move away from US big tech and towards more European [EU], open source [FOSS], privacy-oriented [P], and decentralized [D] alternatives.

I'm sharing my experience here in case it can be useful to others, as well as to gather any additional thoughts or suggestions:

  • Desktop OS: Microsoft Windows 11 --> OpenSUSE Tumbleweed + KDE [EU][FOSS]
  • Web browser: Google Chrome --> Brave --> Vivaldi --> Mozilla Firefox + Strict privacy settings, uBlock Origin, Privacy Badger, Conset-O-Matic [FOSS][P]
  • Email: Gmail --> Infomaniak Mail [EU][FOSS]
  • Calendar: Google Calendar --> Infomaniak Calendar [EU][FOSS] + OneCalendar [EU]
  • Files: Dropbox --> Infomaniak kDrive [EU][FOSS]
  • Photos: Google Photos --> Infomaniak kDrive [EU][FOSS]
  • Notes: Google Keep --> Notesnook [FOSS][P]
  • Social Media:
    • Facebook --> Nothing
    • Twitter/X --> Mastodon (mas.to) [EU][FOSS][D]
    • Reddit --> Lemmy (lemm.ee) [EU][FOSS][D]
  • AI Chatbot: OpenAI ChatGPT --> Mistral AI Le Chat [EU]
  • Videos: Youtube --> Unwatched [EU][FOSS][P]
  • Podcasts: Apple Podcasts --> Spotify --> Pocket Casts [FOSS]
  • Translate: Google Translate --> DeepL [EU]
  • Maps: Google Maps --> Organic Maps [EU][FOSS][P]
  • Weather: Apple Weather --> YR [EU]
  • Online payments: PayPal --> Revolut [EU]
  • Password manager: LastPass --> Mozilla Firefox --> Bitwarden [FOSS][P]
  • Online shopping: Amazon --> Cdiscount [EU]
  • Travel booking: Booking.com --> Direct booking

And here's the list of things I couldn't let go of:

  • Mobile OS: iOS | I have a business iPhone which is also my personal phone
  • Messaging: WhatsApp | The network effect is too big here: family, friends, local businesses, etc
  • Streaming services: Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+ | These come basically for free with my ISP and are too convenient for the moment (esp. w/ kids)
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submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) by SrMono@feddit.org to c/buyfromeu@feddit.org
 
 

Wero is a payment service aiming at providing a digital wallet. According to the cited article, Revolut -- a UK-based digital bank -- partners with Wero. This might be a good accelerator, as Wero was perceived quite sleepy in the past few month.

The British neobank Revolut is set to become a partner of the European payment platform “Wero”, making it the first major fintech to join the European Payments Initiative (EPI). Although Revolut will not initially become a shareholder, it plans to offer Wero as a payment option for its customers. It is a so-called “scheme member”. Up to now, EPI has mainly involved traditional banks such as Deutsche Bank, Postbank, savings banks and cooperative banks. Revolut is now bringing a breath of fresh air to the project and the pressure on other banks to implement e-commerce solutions around Wero more quickly is growing. Revolut is known for rolling out new services quickly. The partnership could therefore significantly speed up the European payment project.

Translated with deepl.

Source, German article (citing Finanz-Szene portal): https://stadt-bremerhaven.de/revolut-steigt-bei-europaeischer-bezahl-wallet-wero-ein/

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Here is the announcement video: https://youtu.be/q85lZdNStGs

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After 2,5 years of intensive research and programming efforts, the entire Openwebsearch.eu project team is excited to grant access to its pilot of the first-ever federated pan-European Open Web Index (OWI).

From June onward, commercial and scientific development teams of any size as well as interested individuals are welcome to access and make use of almost a petabyte (and growing) of open web data under a general research license or – upon request – under a designated commercial license as well.

Given that the European Commission has launched the InvestAI initiative to mobilize €200 billion of investment in artificial intelligence, the Open Web Index comes with perfect timing.

The OpenWebSearch.eu consortium actively calls early adopters to pioneer innovative projects surrounding vertical web search, argumentative search, LLM applications including RAG and more.

“The OWI symbolizes a first step towards true European digital sovereignty and is a fundamental step in paving the way for a comprehensive open European AI landscape.“ says Community Manager Ursula Gmelch and further:

“Our goal behind this initial pilot phase is to onboard a range of projects from diverse domains to get early feedback in. We look forward to users confirming the quality and value in current functionalities and/or helping us pivot in such ways that real market demands can be met and further expanded upon.“

An official kick-off event will be hosted on 6 June from 10 am to 12 am CEST via Zoom.

Registration to the event is open under the following link:

https://cscfi.zoom.us/meeting/register/eATIpDQ5TZidh4Jzkim6FQ#/registration

[,,,]

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Probably like many of you i switched to Linux. I first used it in 2012 when i heard about it in School. Back then i used Ubuntu, but could not figure it out how to play my Games on CD, DVDs and Steam so i switched back to Windows.

Over the Years i often tried it out again but had various problems with it.

Now, thanks to the Trump Donald, i have a real reason to no longer use Microshaft Proudcts. Our Boycott!

So far i tried Linux Mint, KDE Neon, Kubuntu, ZorinOS, PopOS, Debian, Ubuntu, Xubuntu, Lubuntu, Gnu Guix, Fedora, OpenSUSE, Arch, Antergos. That is over 10 years.

What i found out:

  • i dont like gnome, i find the ui weird. xfce is too cobbled together imo and ugly, lxqt too.
  • i like kde and budgie
  • im currently on kubuntu and gnu guix :)

Im too much distrohopping bevause of small annoyances. its not a good time spent! lol

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This mailbox.org articles (GER) sums up planned, but not yet passed, changes in the Swiss surveillance regulations. In short: in future services might need to store metadata (IP, locations, ...) and provide them to authorities in almost realtime. In my understanding, this affects all digital products like Threema messenger or proton mail, VPN, ...

The blog article is written by mailbox.org and thus contains obviously adds for mailbox.org. It might still affect people in choosing the proper services for them.

Deepl translation:

The Swiss government wants to tighten up the surveillance law. With the revision of the Federal Act on the Surveillance of Postal and Telecommunications Traffic (BÜPF), potentially far-reaching changes are imminent that could affect the data protection of millions of users. The supposed safe haven for digital privacy is crumbling: In the future, Swiss email providers with more than 5,000 users could already have to provide metadata to authorities in real time. This would particularly affect those Swiss services that have previously advertised strict data protection.

The BÜPF and the planned revision: the major digital overhaul

Since 2002, the Swiss Surveillance Act has regulated the circumstances under which authorities may access communications data. However, the partial revision of the associated ordinances (VÜPF and VD-ÜPF) now being sought by the Federal Council goes far beyond a mere update. While the official bodies present the changes as a necessary adaptation to 5G technology, the draft contains measures that would significantly increase the level of state surveillance.

Digital x-ray vision: This is how deep the new surveillance would go

The planned changes to the BÜPF would encroach deeply on digital privacy and would also affect users of Swiss email services. It is crucial for users to understand what the authorities will be able to see in future and what they will not.

In future, surveillance would include significantly more metadata, including IP addresses, recipient data and location information - data that is just as sensitive as content, as it can reveal movement and relationship profiles. This would give authorities systematic access to information about who is communicating with whom, when this is happening and from which location. This metadata would be recorded in real time and transmitted to the authorities. Swiss email services, which do not currently store IP addresses by default, would no longer be able to follow this data protection-friendly practice in future. Last but not least, the processing times for requests are to be shortened - from one working day to six hours for large providers and from two working days to one for smaller services.

End-to-end encryption using PGP will remain untouched, i.e. Swiss providers will still not have to decrypt encrypted content. This means that anyone who consistently encrypts their emails with PGP will continue to protect the content of their communication even after the potential change in the law.

What happens after the end of the consultation period?

The deadline for the consultation - a Swiss consultation process in which cantons, parties, associations and affected organizations were able to comment on the draft - expired on 6 May 2025. According to reports, this consultation was widely rejected. The comments received are now being evaluated by the Federal Department of Justice and Police (FDJP) and the draft will be revised if necessary. This process may take several months.

The Federal Council will decide on the final version in fall 2025 at the earliest. If adopted, the new regulations could come into force from 2026, although massive opposition from companies and data protection organizations could delay the process or lead to substantial changes.

The great exodus has begun

In response to the impending regulations, leading providers have already started to relocate their servers abroad - primarily to Germany and Scandinavian countries. Some companies are even considering moving their headquarters out of Switzerland completely. This development shows how seriously the industry is taking the planned changes. Leading industry representatives are particularly critical of the fact that the planned measures would go far beyond the regulations in Germany and the EU.

Data protection in international comparison While Switzerland has long been known for its high standards in terms of digital privacy, Germany now offers significantly stronger protection in some areas. For example, Switzerland has already allowed comprehensive, suspicion-independent data retention for six months since 1997, which would be extended even further with the planned revision of the BÜPF through continuous real-time monitoring. In Germany, on the other hand, the Federal Constitutional Court has repeatedly declared such nationwide data retention to be unconstitutional. Here, surveillance measures generally require a court order and concrete suspicion - basic principles that could potentially be weakened by the Swiss law revision.

Checklist: What users should check now

If you currently use a Swiss email service, you should check the following aspects in light of the possible changes to the law:

Encryption level of your emails: is only transport encryption enabled, or do you use end-to-end encryption such as PGP? Metadata protection: What metadata does your provider store and how will it deal with the possible real-time monitoring obligation? Server locations: Has your provider already moved servers overseas? If so, what law applies to your data stored there? Future plans of the provider: Are there any official statements on possible relocations or adjustments to the data protection guidelines? Check alternatives: Consider switching to a German provider such as mailbox.org, which is protected by strict constitutional court rulings and the GDPR. Outlook: The price of security

The planned revision of the Swiss Surveillance Act marks a turning point. What was once considered a data protection paradise is increasingly developing into a surveillance state that is readjusting the balance between security and privacy - and, in the view of many experts, overshooting the mark. The threatened migration of email providers is a wake-up call - not just for Switzerland, but for everyone who values basic digital rights. The debate shows once again that data protection is not a matter of course, but a fragile asset that requires constant vigilance.

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/27662635

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Is there a good google earth-alternative?

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Not strictly EU, but I'm rather annoyed that this archaic feature has to be included in virtually every model of suitcase in the market.

Alternatively, anyone know how to remove it without destroying the suitcase?

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Been looking for a good Navigation App for my Android Phone which has to be Android Auto Compatible, was wondering what the EU has to offer in that Regard?

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/29680858

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As we all know, the EU loves regulation, sometimes even overregulation. One area where I feel that regulation would help is computer hardware sale. When I want to buy a laptop and I visit the online retailers, normally 80% of the laptops come with Windows, 10% Linux and 10% Freedos or without any. I would very much welcome if the EU made it mandatory for manufaturers to offer the choice of OS when buying a new laptop. Just like you chose the color, how much RAM you wanted, SSD size, you could also chose what operating system you want it with. As part of that, manufacturers would be obliged to send a fix donation after every sold piece to the corresponding Linux distro team, which would help the chronic underfunding issue. Not sure how much the manufacturers pay for Windowsfor the license, but theoretically the Linux equivalent machine should be cheaper even after the donation. Any views are welcome.

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Anyone have alternatives to Apple's AirTags or Samsung's smart tags? I want to have a smart tag tracker on my keys because sometimes I'm really forgetful and would like to have a way to find them without much hassle.

I'm on Android BTW and I know that Apple's AirTags only work on their stuff so I don't count them as an option for me. I just listed them because I wanted to give an example of what I mean.

I would be very happy to see some alternatives to those tags for Europe!

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/29015924

Tesla Sales Plummet 80.7% in Sweden Amid Elon Musk Backlash

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.wtf/post/20659375

Colleagues. I don't feel like having to publish 20 disclaimers here to clarify exactly what I mean. People who want to understand my message will understand them. You should not look for too many "double-bottoms" or "hidden messages" in them. Do you have a problem with the "superficiality" of my post.... so be it.

DETRUMPIFY YOURSELF Buy european products Travel european countries Vote pro european parties Defend european values Use european technology Use european opensource Invest in european companies

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/33484177

Since the warm summer months are coming there'll be people needing to buy fans once again and I'm here to suggest the Dutch brand "Duux"

After getting it recommended by a friend I bought myself a Duux Whisper 2. Its really quiet and of great quality + has an app integration.

They also have air cleaners, humidifiers, dehumidifiers, mobile airconditioners and heaters!

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