europe
Large language model made in Europe built to support all official 24 EU languages.
The EuroLLM project includes Instituto Superior Técnico, the University of Edinburgh, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Université Paris-Saclay, Unbabel, Sorbonne University, Naver Labs, and the University of Amsterdam. Together they created EuroLLM-9B, a multilingual AI model supporting all 24 official EU languages. Developed with support from Horizon Europe, the European Research Council, and EuroHPC, this open-source LLM aims to enhance Europe’s digital sovereignty and foster AI innovation. Trained on the MareNostrum 5 supercomputer, EuroLLM outperforms similar-sized models. It is fully open source and available via Hugging Face.
As the Regional Internet Registry for Europe, Middle East and Central Asia, we serve over 20,000 members in 76 countries. We register IP addresses and ASNs, and act as the secretariat to the RIPE community.
The Global CVE (GCVE) allocation system is a new, decentralized approach to vulnerability identification and numbering, designed to improve flexibility, scalability, and autonomy for participating entities.
While remaining compatible with the traditional CVE system, GCVE introduces GCVE Numbering Authorities (GNAs). GNAs are independent entities that can allocate identifiers without relying on a centralised block distribution system or rigid policy enforcement.
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Up-to-date developments and analyses of the EU AI Act.
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Supported by the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA), the European Union's DNS4EU secure-infrastructure project provides a protective, privacy-compliant, and resilient DNS service to strengthen digital sovereignty and security for EU citizens, governments, and critical infrastructure.
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As per the NIS2 Directive, ENISA is mandated to develop and maintain the European vulnerability database.
Access to reliable and timely information about vulnerabilities affecting Information and Communication Technology (ICT) products and services contributes to an enhanced cybersecurity risk management. Sources of publicly available information about vulnerabilities are an important tool for users of these services, competent authorities, and the broader cybersecurity community. ENISA has established a European Vulnerability Database (EUVD) where entities, regardless of whether they fall within the scope of the NIS2 Directive, and their suppliers of network and information systems, as well as competent authorities, most notably CSIRTs, can voluntarily disclose and register publicly known vulnerabilities to allow users to take appropriate mitigating measures.
“EuroStack” is our original idea for a European Industrial Policy initiative bringing together tech, governance and funding for Europe-focused investment to build and adopt a suite of digital infrastructures: from connectivity to cloud computing, AI and digital platforms.
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Discover European products and services.
A community-driven directory bringing you personal recommendations from across Europe.
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The sovereign cloud partner for strategic and sensitive sectors.
Guarantee the highest standards of security to ensure the protection of their data and that of their citizens.
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European alternatives for digital products. We help you find European alternatives for digital service and products, like cloud services and SaaS products.
The Cyber Citizen initiative will produce a model for cybersecurity learning and a learning portal based on that model. The learning portal will have content for all citizens, and this content, such as a cyber citizen skills learning game, will take into account different target groups. Citizens’ abilities to act in a safe and secure manner in the digital world are improved with educational and communicative elements in the learning portal.
The GDPR.txt file is a proposed standard which informs hosting providers about the personal data collected by softwares. It aims to simplify the compliance to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of hosting providers. Note that a GDPR.txt file is not enough to make your project GDPR compliant (but it will help).
esup-signature is an application that aims to dematerialize and simplify the visa and signature circuits (initialers).
Esup-signature allows you to visa or sign documents using electronic certificates (eIDAS for example) or by simply adding an image to a PDF. This electronic signature is supported by the DSS Signature base provided by the European Commission.
The EBICS protocol is a substitution of the ETEBAC standard enabling file sharing between banks and their customers.
This framework is an implementation of an EBICS client (version 2.4) for French standard that has successfully passed all EBICS qualification tests and allows to exchange secure banking transactions.
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