The recent presentation of new measures by the European Commission to strengthen technological sovereignty has once again placed digital autonomy at the center of the debate. The package includes initiatives in areas such as artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and open source, with the goal of reducing technological dependencies and strengthening European competitiveness.
In this context, Virtual Cable emphasizes that the debate on European technological sovereignty also includes the digital workplace, the layer through which users access corporate applications, data, and services every day.
The digital workplace acts as an entry point to corporate systems and is therefore a critical part of organizations’ security, continuity, operational flexibility, and ability to adapt. Managing virtual desktops, applications, and remote access is a strategic element for maintaining greater control over technology environments.
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Lack of control over these environments increases dependency on specific vendors, limits decision-making capacity, and makes it harder to respond to incidents, technological changes, or new operational requirements. Ensuring business continuity also becomes more complex when organizations do not have flexible and adaptable architectures.
For this reason, Virtual Cable highlights the importance of adopting European, open, and interoperable solutions that provide freedom of choice and reduce external technological dependencies.
In this regard, UDS Enterprise, developed by Virtual Cable in Europe, enables centralized management of virtual desktops and applications, as well as secure remote access, from a single platform. Its approach helps create more controlled, flexible, and resilient environments, adapted to the current needs of public and private organizations.
Beyond Cloud Computing and Artificial Intelligence
“Europe is taking important steps to strengthen its technological autonomy. That sovereignty must also extend to the day-to-day operations of organizations. It is not enough to control where data is hosted or which infrastructures are used; organizations also need to decide how users access their critical applications and services. The digital workplace is an essential layer of that independence,” says Félix Casado, CEO of Virtual Cable.
Technological sovereignty represents one of Europe’s major challenges in the coming years. For Virtual Cable, true digital autonomy requires keeping the debate open beyond cloud computing and artificial intelligence. Europe does not only need sovereign clouds, chips, and artificial intelligence; it also needs sovereign digital workplaces.
Frequently Asked Questions About European Technological Sovereignty and the Digital Workplace
What is the relationship between European technological sovereignty and the digital workplace?
The digital workplace is the layer through which users access corporate applications, data, and services. For this reason, it is part of organizations’ technological autonomy and their ability to maintain control over their digital environments.
Why is the digital workplace important for digital sovereignty?
The digital workplace directly influences how access, desktops, applications, and remote environments are managed. A controlled, secure, and interoperable digital workplace helps reduce technological dependencies and improve operational continuity.
How does UDS Enterprise contribute to organizations’ technological autonomy?
UDS Enterprise enables centralized management of virtual desktops, applications, and secure remote access from a single platform developed in Europe. Its approach helps create more flexible, controlled environments adapted to each organization’s needs.
Which sectors can benefit from a sovereign digital workplace?
Public administrations, healthcare, education, defense, energy, industry, banking, and digital service providers can especially benefit from more secure, controlled, and interoperable digital workplace environments.
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