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padjo 5 hours ago

Makes sense, using an office suite hosted by a hostile power isn't a very smart longterm strategy.

samsonradu 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Wondering what software are China/Russia using in their public administration?

orthoxerox an hour ago | parent [-]

Local LibreOffice forks. And MS Office, of course.

Winblows11 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yes I remember when UK regulator blocked Microsoft from buying Activision there were posts on r/Microsoft regarding their ability to send update to brick all Windows installs in UK and delete all Azure data of UK companies, how UK was a small insignificant market compared to BRICs so it wouldn't hurt MSFT stock price.

Given JD Vance obviously hates UK/EU way more than Trump, and he may be next US president, he may in fact threaten Microsoft to do it against UK and EU.

bee_rider 3 hours ago | parent [-]

On one hand the dependence on Microsoft is generally bad.

On the other, we shouldn’t take the opinions of the sort of fan who hangs around on a corporation’s subreddit too seriously.

shermantanktop 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The trend up until the 2010s was that global companies were so big and ubiquitous that they could dictate the economic actions of nations, not the other way around. International military conflicts were influenced by the likes of Halliburton. Corporations were the new nation-states, countries were mere speed bumps in the flow of global capital. That was seen by some as a great thing, aligning everyone’s interests together and encouraging peace.

In that world, France betting on Microsoft is not only benign, it’s a positive. That’s also the world of Davos and Jeffrey Epstein.

We’re experiencing a global shift toward nationalism which has pushed back hard on that trend. There’s things to like about that and things to dislike, but those things differ wildly depending on your politics.

thrance 4 hours ago | parent [-]

I'd say it goes beyond nationalism. Even countries that haven't succumbed to the far right are forced to play by the new rules. I've heard some refer to it as "neomercantilism".

trolleski 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Politicians in the EU are complicit to say the least. And I hope they'll prove me wrong.