
Cloud under observation: The Swiss decision against Microsoft 365 & Co. at a glance ( (C) M. Schall Verlag)
Europe’s digital security is getting a new spotlight – this time from Switzerland. A recent resolution by several Swiss institutions and cantons points out the risks of the US Cloud Act in no uncertain terms. At a time when companies and administrations are already facing growing uncertainty, the issue is gaining momentum that extends far beyond national borders.
The new analysis article in the international magazine by Markus Schall takes a comprehensive look at this issue, classifies the background and clearly shows why the debate is gaining momentum right now.
What the Cloud Act actually means – and why Switzerland is reacting
The US Cloud Act obliges American providers to hand over their customers’ data at the request of American authorities – regardless of where this data is physically stored. It is precisely this extraterritorial requirement that has prompted Switzerland to react in an unusually clear manner.
The resolution clearly shows that awareness of digital sovereignty is growing and that European states are increasingly aware of how strongly they are interwoven into foreign jurisdictions. The article carefully dissects these points and makes it clear how deeply the intervention can reach into companies, administrations and critical infrastructures.
Significance for European companies: an underestimated risk
Many companies have been relying on large US cloud service providers for years without fully understanding the legal consequences. The Swiss resolution now brings the issue to the surface once again and shows that the dependency is not just of a technical nature, but has a direct impact on compliance, data protection and strategic business decisions.
This can lead to considerable risks, especially for industries with sensitive data. The article explains why a return to local or sovereign cloud models is moving back into the strategic focus.
Classification beyond political camps – sober and forward-looking
The article deliberately does not follow a political agenda. It calmly sets out the background and presents the situation as it is: a legal conflict of interest between states that can have direct consequences for companies, administrations and citizens. The analysis shows that the key question is no longer whether the Cloud Act is problematic, but how Europe and Switzerland want to react to it and what long-term decisions are necessary.
Why the debate is now picking up speed
With increasing digitalization, it is becoming clear that data storage is no longer just a technical detail. It is a geopolitical factor of growing importance. The Swiss resolution is therefore probably just the beginning of a broader European discussion that will intensify in the coming months and years. For the first time, this article takes an overarching perspective on this development, considering technical as well as social and legal aspects.
A contribution for decision-makers, entrepreneurs and interested citizens
The new article is aimed at anyone who wants to understand why the digital power structure is currently being reorganized. It offers orientation in a situation that appears complex, but ultimately has clear basic patterns. The combination of classical analysis, historical references and a look at long-term developments results in a text that goes beyond the daily political excitement and creates a framework that makes it easier to make informed decisions.
Read the full article on the web site of Markus Schall.
Further comprehensive background articles in the magazine
If you want to take a closer look at Europe-wide digitization plans, Markus Schall’s international magazine has a constantly growing archive of in-depth analyses. Central EU projects such as the digital euro, the electronic patient file, the digital ID, the planned EU censorship laws, the 28th regime and many other topics are explained in an understandable way – free of charge and in full length.
The articles are neutral, thoroughly researched and deliberately accessible without a paywall so that citizens, companies and decision-makers can form their own opinion. Especially in a phase in which Europe is increasingly characterized by digital policy decisions, this offer provides a valuable point of orientation.
Frequently asked questions
* Why is the Swiss Cloud Act decision so relevant for German and European companies?
Because it is a rarely clear example of how a European country formulates a sovereign stance towards non-European legal access. With this resolution, Switzerland shows that digital dependencies can have serious economic and legal consequences – and that states are well advised not to relinquish control over sensitive data lightly.
* How does the Cloud Act differ from traditional data protection risks?
The Cloud Act is not a data protection problem in the narrower sense, but an access problem. It essentially allows US authorities to access data that is stored outside the USA – provided it is held by a US provider. This means that even technically sound encryption or European data protection regulations lose their effect if the provider itself can be directly obliged to hand over data.
* What consequences could the Swiss position have for other European countries?
It sets a precedent. If a country openly states that dependence on US clouds poses a security and sovereignty risk, the pressure on other countries to develop their own stance will increase. The more countries take this path, the more European cloud initiatives and local IT infrastructures could gain in importance.
* Why does digital sovereignty play such an important role in 2025?
Because almost all EU laws in recent years – from the digital euro to the digital ID – rely on centralized IT infrastructures. Whoever controls the servers ultimately also controls the stability of these systems. States are increasingly recognizing that digital dependency is synonymous with political vulnerability in an emergency.
* Why is the article on Markus-Schall.de particularly helpful for classification?
Because it doesn’t just explain the content of the Swiss resolution, but also embeds the topic calmly, thoroughly and without buzzwords. It is not about outrage or alarmism, but about making the context understandable: the geopolitical background, the legal implications, the effects on the economy, administration and citizens.
* Is the Cloud Act only a problem for large corporations?
Quite the opposite. Small and medium-sized companies in particular are affected because they often use standard cloud solutions and do not have their own infrastructures. They often operate their ERP systems, customer administration, e-invoices or backups with US providers – and therefore potentially within the scope of the Cloud Act, sometimes without even knowing it.
* How should companies react in the short term?
Don’t panic, but be vigilant. The first step is to take stock: Where is the data stored? With which provider? In which jurisdiction? Then you can consider whether a migration is sensible or necessary. The Swiss resolution provides a good opportunity to rethink internal strategies and migrate critical systems to European providers.
* Why is it important for citizens to be aware of such resolutions?
Because digital infrastructure has long since become part of everyday life – from health records to digital identity and banking transactions. When states and companies lose sovereignty over their data, citizens also indirectly lose some of their own control. An informed public protects freedom, and this is precisely where the reporting on Markus-Schall.de comes in.
M. Schall Verlag
Hackenweg 97
26127 Oldenburg
Germany
https://markus-schall.com
Herr Markus Schall
info@schall-verlag.de
Schall-Verlag was founded in 2025 by Markus Schall – out of a desire to publish books that provide clarity, stimulate reflection and consciously avoid the hectic flow of the zeitgeist. The publishing house does not see itself as a mass marketplace, but as a curated platform for content with attitude, depth and substance.
The focus is on topics such as personal development, crisis management, social dynamics, technological transformation and critical thinking. All books are the result of genuine conviction, not market analysis – and are aimed at readers who are looking for guidance, insight and new perspectives.
The publishing house is deliberately designed to be compact, independent and with high standards in terms of language, content and design. Schall-Verlag is based in Oldenburg (Lower Saxony) and plans multilingual publications in German and English.
This release was published on openPR.













 