Vice President of Open Source Innovation, OpenNebula Systems
Alberto P. Martí has spent most of his career in Spain and in the UK, both in Tech and in Higher Education. As VP of Open Source Innovation at OpenNebula Systems, he deals with strategic collaborations with cloud and edge providers, other open source initiatives, and CIOs from relevant vendors. He is one of the initial promoters of the SovereignEdge.EU initiative, coordinating involvement in the Horizon Europe programme and in other joint R&D activities based on European open source technologies for the cloud-edge continuum. In March 2024, Alberto was elected Chair of the Industry Facilitation Group of the new €3B IPCEI Cloud.
Roundtable Room 3 (Level 3)
Open
European policymakers are actively seeking to reduce reliance on overseas technology giants while fostering homegrown tech innovation, with initiatives such as the EU Chips Act, the EU AI Act, Gaia-X and the EuroStack. Does Europe’s push for digital independence enable a more competitive technology ecosystem or does it risk creating new regulatory and technological barriers that stifle cross-border technology collaboration? What are these trade-offs, and what are the opportunities for digital decoupling to enable other policy goals, such as nurturing local innovation ecosystems and build sovereign, trustworthy payment systems? This roundtable will explore the trade-offs and opportunities offered by the digital sovereignty movement, and spotlight the case of digital payments as an example where these questions are playing out.
This roundtable gathers researchers, technologists, policymakers, as well as AI and digital payments experts, to identify the steps Europe can take to invest in the capabilities, skills, and partnerships needed to drive digital sovereignty efforts; explore how European privacy standards are influencing the development of sovereign digital payments infrastructure in Europe; learn from alternative models emerging from the Global South; and map out a European path towards technological autonomy.
This roundtable seeks to: