German firms to submit competing EU bids for AI data centre, newspaper reports


FILE PHOTO: The logo of Deutsche Telekom AG is silhouetted against the sun and clouds atop of the headquarters of German telecommunications giant in Bonn, Germany, February 19, 2019. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo

BERLIN (Reuters) -Deutsche Telekom, Ionos and the Schwarz Group's IT subsidiary will submit competing applications to the EU for an AI data centre after the German firms could not agree on a common concept, the Tagesspiegel newspaper reported Thursday.

Software giant SAP will not participate, according to the newspaper.

The expression of interest which is being submitted precedes an official application, which will take place in autumn, a spokesperson of the web-hosting company Ionos told Reuters.

"The expression of interest is a first step. On this basis, the European Commission defines the further phases," Achim Weiss, CEO of Ionos, said in a statement via the spokesperson.

The German applicants could still join forces during the selection process for the data centres planned by the European Union, Tagesspiegel said in the report.

The other companies involved were not available for comment when contacted by Reuters.

(Writing by Miranda Murray, Editing by Friederike Heine and Matthias Williams)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

What’s your sign to keep swiping?
Scientists develop tool to 'tell how fast someone is ageing'
US auto safety nominee calls for active oversight of self-driving cars
Citigroup considers issuing its own stablecoin, CEO says
Crypto week legislation hits snag in US Congress, some stocks fall
Roblox launches IP licensing platform, partners with Netflix, Lionsgate
X hit by complaints to EU over user data and targeted advertising
Factbox-Some of the big US investments being made in AI and energy
Blackstone to invest $25 billion in Pennsylvania data centers and natural gas plants, COO says
ECB supervisors focus on risks from tariffs to cyber attacks, central bank sources say

Others Also Read