Who Needs Goliaths? Don't Write Off Europe's Army of Davids
This is the final conversation from DLD. And the most optimistic - at least from a European perspective. John Thornhill, the FT’s Innovation Editor and founder of Sifted, has a quite different take on Europe’s tech scene from our other guests. Yes, he acknowledges, the regulatory environment is complex. And, yes, late-stage capital is thin. But Thornhill sees something the doomsayers miss: resilience. A new generation of founders isn’t building “European champions” — they’re building global ones. Innovation hot spots are popping up across the continent: London, Berlin, Stockholm, Tallinn, Lisbon. Paris (of all places) is enjoying a renaissance. And deep tech — biological computing, synthetic biology, materials science — may finally give Europe’s research strength a viable path to commercialization. So who needs Silicon Valley Goliaths when you have an army of European Davids?
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Modern Britain and all that caper: Jonathan Coe on British chocolate, the Royal Family and its decision to marry the wrong Super Power
An Old Story Told Differently: Bethanne Patrick on 8 books reimagining the experience of first generation immigrants
Against the Romance of Transformation: Leon Weiseltier on America's love affair with the promise of personal and social change
Normalizing China: Gilles Guiheux on China's very ordinary history between 1949 and today
Against Green Capitalism: Charles Derber on how big money fuels extinction and what we can do about it
No, Men aren't Angels: Peter Slen on why the Federalist Papers is one of the ten books that has most shaped America
Dumb devices, dumb bureaucrats and dumb entrepreneurs: Keith Teare on FTC chair Lina Khan, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and why the iPhone is on the brink of becoming radically more intelligent
Why Disorder may be the New Order: Jason Pack on how the global system itself has gone rogue and no longer conforms with the textbooks
Why Artificial Intelligence will make us smarter: W. Russell Neuman presents AI as a progressive moment in human evolution
An Afterword to Words Themselves? Bethanne Patrick on six speculative novels which imagine a world saturated by AI
Should we punish innovation? Keith Teare on public and private investment markets, breaking up Google and paying to use X
The 10 books that have most shaped America: Peter Slen on Thomas Paine's COMMON SENSE
The White Man's version of Democracy in America? Brook Manville on the "Civic Bargain" that defines the history of democracy in western civilization