-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
AI-generated videos use Down syndrome to make sales
-
Ghana pushes for concrete slavery reparations
-
Europe risks 'total irrelevance' without sovereign tech: Cohere chief
-
AI-generated videos wield Down syndrome to make sales
-
Suspected jihadists stage deadly new attack on Niger airport
-
Man dies, trains and classes disrupted as heatwave hits France
-
Oil tankers pass Hormuz Strait after war deal: tracker
-
Swiss central bank holds interest rates, with eye on currency risks
-
S.African sentenced in 'world's largest' rhino trafficking case
-
Bank of England follows Fed in holding interest rate
-
German chemical company to cut 3,200 jobs as crisis worsens
-
Range raises $8.3M Series A to unify treasury, risk and compliance across stablecoins and fiat
-
Innovations on show at Paris Vivatech fest
-
Bird flu kills 13,000 seal pups on remote Australian island
-
New wave of anti-LGBTQ laws sweeps Africa
-
Drastic restrictions on public transport take effect in Cuba
-
Cuba approves economic reforms to boost private sector, investment: state TV
-
Robots pour cocktails and run marathons, but still can't multitask
-
Birthright citizenship helps spark US World Cup run
-
Castro gives crucial backing to Cuba reforms
-
Driving the World's Leading Supply Chains: 9 OMP Customers Named to The 2026 Gartner Top 25
-
Qantas to launch non-stop Sydney-London flights in October 2027
-
US Fed chair Warsh vows reforms as central bank signals rate hikes on horizon
-
US Federal Reserve holds rates steady, raises inflation expectations
-
Brest boss Roy dies aged 58 from cancer
-
Military salutes and K-pop madness shake up Colombia campaigning
-
Recovery of ship traffic in Hormuz limited, but signs emerge
-
England's World Cup opener puts Spanish resort on beer alert
-
Nations allege 'attacks' on science at key climate talks
-
Plague was killing hunter-gatherers 5,500 years ago: study
-
Prince Harry and family to visit UK in July: media
-
What happens when the Strait of Hormuz re-opens?
-
US retail sales beat expectations in May as energy costs stay high
-
Spain logs third-warmest year on record in 2025
-
'Heartbreaking': Afghan govt staff abandon smartphones
-
Groundbreaking US astronaut Christina Koch wins top Spanish award
-
BBC eyes compulsory redundancies in cost-cutting drive
-
Sovereignty fears dog AI enthusiasm at France's Vivatech
-
Japan puts the heat on suspected ice cream cartel
-
Sovereignty fears to dog AI enthusiasm at France's Vivatech
-
MEXC May Report: SPACEX Launchpad Oversubscribed 15.5x, US Equity Futures Volume Jumps 85%
-
MEXC Prediction Markets Launches Combo to Enable Multi-Event Combination Trading
-
'We have always won': Ebola pioneer still on front line at 84
-
Trap, neuter, release: Jakarta battles cat-astrophic stray numbers
-
US Fed set to hold rates steady at Warsh's first meeting in charge
-
U.S. Air Force Awards GA-ASI Production Contract for FQ-42A CCA
-
Spanish actor Javier Bardem leaves his mark on Hollywood Boulevard
-
After three sessions, SpaceX already among world's most valuable companies
-
Surging SpaceX overtakes Amazon to become 5th biggest company
Europe risks 'total irrelevance' without sovereign tech: Cohere chief
Europe risks "total technological irrelevance" if it fails to develop sovereign capabilities, the head of Canadian AI startup Cohere warned Thursday on the sidelines of the Vivatech trade fair in Paris.
Aidan Gomez spoke to AFP the day after a G7 meeting in Evian, eastern France, where he and other AI luminaries including OpenAI's Sam Altman and Anthropic's Dario Amodei were invited to join leaders of the world's top industrial nations.
Without tech built on home soil, "your data, your productivity, your critical industries, your ability to defend yourself, it will be what others allow," Gomez said.
Vivatech has been overshadowed by European tech sovereignty concerns, after Anthropic withdrew access entirely to its most powerful models, Mythos and Fable, in response to a White House order that they be kept out of foreign hands.
- 'Cold water' -
"It's like everyone got cold water splashed on their face," Gomez said.
He has striven to place Cohere as a sovereign alternative in both the European and Asian markets.
The 2019-founded company builds AI models for businesses and governments, shunning the consumer applications explored by its giant American rivals.
Instead, its offerings focus on concrete applications in health, finance, energy and national security.
Truly sovereign capability requires "a set of technical guarantees," Gomez said: "infrastructure that you control, that is run by a sovereign entity... meaning a company and champion within your nation."
As global tech firms scramble to respond to governments' urgent quest to escape US or Chinese reach, many are offering solutions of their own marketed as "sovereign".
But "there's so much sovereignty washing, where solutions that are no at all contributing to diversification or resilience are being painted in that light," Gomez said.
Cohere does not operate its own data centres, planning instead to deploy its software on infrastructure owned by local companies like France's Mistral or Germany's Deutsche Telekom.
Those AI models "require enormous resources" to develop, Gomez said. "Each country can't build its own model, that's the reality we have to face."
"What we need are a number of champions distributed across democracies and then democracies collaborating together to build those champions up," he urged.
- European ambitions -
Cohere sees Europe as a natural sphere of expansion in that light, as a "democratic stronghold" against the tech prowess of autocracies such as China.
The Canadian company last month announced it was buying German startup Aleph Alpha with backing from both governments.
With dual headquarters in Toronto and Berlin, the merged entity is valued at around $20 billion.
Since then it has also snapped up Canadian-German biomedical startup Reliant AI.
And it signed partnerships in May with Spanish firms Indra, a defence specialist, and Multiverse computing, which develops AI software.
Canada and Europe have a "historic alignment (and) values alignment," said Gomez, whose mother is British and father is Spanish.
He himself lives in London, where Cohere recently beefed up its offices.
The company now numbers around 700 staff and is preparing a new fundraising round.
Europe is Cohere's second-largest region for revenue behind North America, Gomez said.
"We're seeing a rapid uptake" of AI in Europe, the CEO said.
He added that he puts no stock in calls for a pause in AI development to properly weigh the technology's dangers, issued in early June by American giants including OpenAI and Anthropic.
"I think no-one is going to pause. It's a very silly posture. It's not realistic," he said.
"If anything, Canada and Europe have to go much, much faster."
C.Smith--CPN