Urgente: ciò renderà più facile avviare le aziende nell’UE e sfidare il dominio americano per ad esempio l’industria del software. Ma ci restano solo 4 giorni per firmare la petizione.
Urgente: ciò renderà più facile avviare le aziende nell’UE e sfidare il dominio americano per ad esempio l’industria del software. Ma ci restano solo 4 giorni per firmare la petizione.
This should be implemented ASAP, together with the single investments union and an euro-wide payment solution(s) (digital euro or private based).
However, I really don’t see it happening in the next ten years. The political class in Europe has got many hits, but they have not woken up yet. They still have not understood that they need to cut timelines by orders of magnitude.
shadowrun456 on
Isn’t this already the case? I worked at a company which operated worldwide. To operate in the EU legally, we needed one license. To operate in the US legally, we needed 51 licenses (one for each state + federal).
Edit:
>we only have 4 days left to sign the petition
The website has two dates:
>30 September 2025 (which is *a month* and 4 days from now) — which is to write a comment to the European Commission.
And then it says:
>But the final proposal has to be given to the new commission on **January 15th** as they kick off their 2025 work on this topic. Please join our efforts until then to make EU-Inc as useful as possible for European startups.
…with no year specified.
Millon1000 on
I signed this months ago. Reddit doesn’t seem interested in this as it never picks up steam here, but this is extremely important. Please sign it if you have the time.
Alexel1112 on
RemindMe! 2 days
TheoryOfDevolution on
Anyone can start a company in the EU. The startup isn’t the issue. Our companies just don’t have the capital to expand to a worldwide market. Inevitably they get bought up by tech giants with deeper pockets. We also don’t have a risk taking culture. Some of our biggest “tech” companies are dinosaurs (Siemens, SAP, Bosch, etc). Our last major innovative tech companies died out (Alcatel-Lucent, Nokia, etc). All we have left are either value-chain supplier (ASML) or service provider (Spotify), neither of which are particularly diverse with regards to their business.
Even if we can solve the legal barriers, startups will still favor getting bought out over acting being leaders in their fields.
Deimos_F on
Why isn’t this a normal EU petition with ID check etc.?
abc_744 on
Standardized EU wide stock options would be huge
Talkycoder on
While standardisation is a great step, the problem within the EU lies with the difference in start-up culture, investment opportunities, and government grants. Americans are also less culturally divided and natively speak the Lingua Franca.
Case in point, the UK has the third most startups globally (behind US and China), with London having more start-ups than any city anywhere; It’s European and was still this high in the ranking as an EU member.
Another example is that high investment Sweden pulls a massive amount of weight for the continent, especially when you consider it has 1/8th of Germany’s population, a country that is stereotyped to be very tech illiterate.
This is an issue on a nation and cultural level, not due to EU-made beuocracy.
9 commenti
It’s not gonna make a difference
This should be implemented ASAP, together with the single investments union and an euro-wide payment solution(s) (digital euro or private based).
However, I really don’t see it happening in the next ten years. The political class in Europe has got many hits, but they have not woken up yet. They still have not understood that they need to cut timelines by orders of magnitude.
Isn’t this already the case? I worked at a company which operated worldwide. To operate in the EU legally, we needed one license. To operate in the US legally, we needed 51 licenses (one for each state + federal).
Edit:
>we only have 4 days left to sign the petition
The website has two dates:
>30 September 2025 (which is *a month* and 4 days from now) — which is to write a comment to the European Commission.
And then it says:
>But the final proposal has to be given to the new commission on **January 15th** as they kick off their 2025 work on this topic. Please join our efforts until then to make EU-Inc as useful as possible for European startups.
…with no year specified.
I signed this months ago. Reddit doesn’t seem interested in this as it never picks up steam here, but this is extremely important. Please sign it if you have the time.
RemindMe! 2 days
Anyone can start a company in the EU. The startup isn’t the issue. Our companies just don’t have the capital to expand to a worldwide market. Inevitably they get bought up by tech giants with deeper pockets. We also don’t have a risk taking culture. Some of our biggest “tech” companies are dinosaurs (Siemens, SAP, Bosch, etc). Our last major innovative tech companies died out (Alcatel-Lucent, Nokia, etc). All we have left are either value-chain supplier (ASML) or service provider (Spotify), neither of which are particularly diverse with regards to their business.
Even if we can solve the legal barriers, startups will still favor getting bought out over acting being leaders in their fields.
Why isn’t this a normal EU petition with ID check etc.?
Standardized EU wide stock options would be huge
While standardisation is a great step, the problem within the EU lies with the difference in start-up culture, investment opportunities, and government grants. Americans are also less culturally divided and natively speak the Lingua Franca.
Case in point, the UK has the third most startups globally (behind US and China), with London having more start-ups than any city anywhere; It’s European and was still this high in the ranking as an EU member.
Another example is that high investment Sweden pulls a massive amount of weight for the continent, especially when you consider it has 1/8th of Germany’s population, a country that is stereotyped to be very tech illiterate.
This is an issue on a nation and cultural level, not due to EU-made beuocracy.