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monospaced
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
SAP has been doing something similar for years now. They call it indirect use. If a system integrates with SAP and accesses data you have to pay licensing fees. Even if you host the SAP system yourself.
monospaced
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
In Germany a couple of two software developers would earn above the threshold of ca. 70k EUR per year each and therefore pay each around 15.000 EUR per year, which would be higher than the number given in the article ($27.000 for a family in US vs. around $35.000 in Germany currency converted). This applies for the public insurance where adults each have to be insured but kids are included for free.

People with lower incomes pay proportionately less, government employees and high earners can also switch to private insurance where they get much better service but for non-government employees this comes with risks and has to be done at a younger age.
monospaced
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Yes, there's a big push towards "Digital Sovereignty". The EU just now published a compact guideline for IT purchasing in regards to this: https://commission.europa.eu/document/download/09579818-64a6...
monospaced
·tahun lalu·discuss
They offer managed PaaS services such as databases, logging, secrets management. They also offer quite some managed SaaS services like ServiceNow or soon SAP Rise. These are not (yet) advertised on their website.
monospaced
·tahun lalu·discuss
Other notable EU cloud providers are also STACKIT, IONOS, Cloud Ferro and Exoscale