A German Green MEP demands the European Commission reveal EU funding for Elon Musk’s companies, including Tesla and SpaceX, amid rising transatlantic tensions
The European Commission is figuring out how it could help Ukraine secure satellite communication capacity in the wake of Elon Musk reportedly threatening to pull Kyiv’s access to his
Eutelsat's shares surged amid fears that Ukraine's Starlink access could soon face disruption, though it's unclear if that will happen.
The French satellite company Eutelsat, the owner of OneWeb, a competitor to Elon Musk's Starlink Internet satellite system, may provide assistance to Ukraine if the connection from Starlink is disconnected.
The World Bank’s economists and top administrators are among the highest paid financial functionaries in the world, which explains the reason why the Bank is a major cause of the brain drain from developing countries: a great number of highly trained economists from developing countries prefer to work at the Bank instead of their home countries,
French influencers and MEPs send daily tweets to the billionaire on his platform urging him to take up French issues, hoping his impact would be as impactful as it was in the UK and Germany.
European Union leaders are holding emergency summit talks to beef up their own military defenses and make sure Ukraine will still be properly protected by its allies
Are centralized nation states compatible with decentralized infrastructure? Elon Musk, the EU and Estonia are trying to find out.
Ukraine will receive a new €3.5 billion disbursement from the EU in March, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said as she arrived for the International Summit on the Support of Ukraine in Kyiv.
Ukraine had shown interest in alternative satellite options, including Govsatcom, a shared network of EU national government satellites, and IRIS, a new constellation expected to be operational in the 2030s,