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US, EU Forge Closer Ties on Emerging Technologies To Counter Russia and China (wsj.com) 35

The U.S. and European Union plan to cooperate more on technology regulation, industrial development and bilateral trade following President Biden's visit, in a bid to help Western allies better compete with China and Russia on developing and protecting critical and emerging technologies. From a report: Central to the increased coordination will be a new high-level Trade and Technology Council the two sides unveiled Tuesday. The aim of the TTC is to boost innovation and investment within and between the two allied economies, strengthen supply chains and avert unnecessary obstacles to trade, among other tasks. "You see the possibility for alignment," said European Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager in an interview.

In a sign of both sides' aspirations for the council, it will be co-chaired on the U.S. side by Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo and U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai. The EU side will be co-chaired the Ms. Vestager, the bloc's top competition and digital-policy official, and fellow Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis, who handles trade. As the EU's top antitrust enforcer, Ms. Vestager has gained prominence for her cases against U.S. tech giants including Apple, Google parent Alphabet and Facebook. Former presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump both said her policies unfairly targeted American companies. Ms. Vestager has said her work doesn't single out any nationality. The TTC, which is slated to hold its first meeting in the fall and oversee many working groups, will allow the EU and U.S. to focus on cooperation, she said. Both sides stressed they would maintain regulatory autonomy within their respective legal systems.

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US, EU Forge Closer Ties on Emerging Technologies To Counter Russia and China

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  • As the sides views on things like privacy and anti-trust are so far from each other.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      The whole point of the council is to spend some effort on how to bring the two sides together, not bless each other's current positions and declare failure.

  • Let's first see if the Europeans are keen on freezing the Digital Market Act (DMA) which unfairly discriminates against U.S. tech firms. If they continue with it we should punish them severely.
    • Re: Wait and see (Score:5, Insightful)

      by getuid() ( 1305889 ) on Thursday June 17, 2021 @10:57AM (#61496584)

      "Discriminate", perhaps. "Unfairly" not so much.

      Context is key. The act apparently attacks the largest IT firms for a very specific number of reasons, namely be because the are the largest, they employ lock-in tactics, they don't pay any amount of taxes that passes the laughing test, to name a few.

      That all 5 happen to be US companies tells more about the US attitude against the world i general an the EU in particular, than the other way around.

      • If you've followed the Monsanto case as I have you'd know that the EU isn't interested in consumer rights or breaking up cartels, only in industrial policy.

        They don't care if users' data are abused for advertising, as long as it's done by a European company. What they really want is Facebook / Google / Amazon being replaced with European alternatives, nothing more.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    EU actually wants to sell stuff to China. US is the one who's trying to get others and itself to stop all trade with China. If US tries to force the EU to pick the US over China, EU could lose access to the fastest growing economies in the world.

    But the US knows that by trying to force the EU, if EU tells the US to fuck off, the US has a huge chance of being ally-less in the whole world except for it's fellow 5 eyes. There would be serious sad-trombones at that point.

    • I'm not sure what you mean by "US is the one who's trying to get others and itself to stop all trade with China" because the US corporation I work for makes about $1 billion in profit every year from the Chinese operations it owns.
      The US' real problem is that they have proven to be really unreliable and the countries it formerly allied itself with don't really trust it any more, with good reason.
  • The horse has already left the barn on this one.

    I remember back in (1994?) when congress and the pres were all excited to get China into the WTO because of all the $$$$ their donors (both parties) would make selling cheap stuff from there (and putting lots of Americans out of work in the process). I remember thinking at the time that that was nuts and for a wide variety of reasons would be terribly regretted badly one day.

    That day is now soon coming.

    China will in the very near future become the world econom

    • by Jzanu ( 668651 )
      The world is not a game of Risk though. The real reason Japan declared war was for access to oil to fuel its industrialization, a resource which had only available in trade with the US due to colonial mercantilism that made other sources inadequate. When US policy restricted the oil trade, that was the bell opening the war. There is no comparable limited resource that will push China to declare war on any other country. It is not only "natural" country in terms of territorial integrity as its invaders alway
      • by jlar ( 584848 )

        The real reason Japan declared war was for access to oil to fuel its industrialization, a resource which had only available in trade with the US due to colonial mercantilism that made other sources inadequate. When US policy restricted the oil trade, that was the bell opening the war. There is no comparable limited resource that will push China to declare war on any other country. It is not only "natural" country in terms of territorial integrity as its invaders always lost or shortly after winning actually became Chinese themselves because of cultural exchange. Rather than war, China will exert its powers in exactly the same way the US did by establishing a network of military bases supporting shipping ports and sea lanes.

        The reason USA restricted trade (also from colonies) with Japan was because of the Japanese invasions of China and later French Indochina. But you are right that this effectively gave the Japanese little choice if they wanted to continue their war efforts. USA and Britain also supported China in other ways and if you look at the Japanese declaration of war you will see that they explicitly state the support to China and that this was an existential threat to Japan as the reason for the declaration. In other

  • Well I hope we get strict with China.

    The paperâ(TM)s staff rejected the accusations against them, and vowed to get the paper out regardless, emblazoning the front page with photos of their five arrested bosses, and the headline: âoeNational security police searched Apple, arrested five people, seized 44 news material hard disks.â ... The cityâ(TM)s security chief, John Lee, warned other journalists on Thursday to âoedistanceâ themselves from the accused, who he referred to as

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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