BETA

18 Amendments of Dario TAMBURRANO related to 2016/2145(INI)

Amendment 54 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital H
H. whereas the free Linux software would not only produce tens of billions of euros in savings, but also allow the European digital sector to play a leading role, but this is not a priority for the Commissionpublic support to open software has the potential to produce significant savings, to enhance innovation and to reduce dependence-related risks;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 58 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital I
I. whereas the Commission calls any company with a European subsidiary a 'Europeacurrent trends in globalized markets have produced, among other results, an intensive presence throughout the world of local subsidiaries of foreign company';ies, and that erroneoaccordingly the Commission must designation means that it supports foreign companies engaged in lobbying while neglecting European companiesvelop and apply criteria that allow to consider as priority stakeholders those companies who have been born in Europe and keep their major interests in the territory of the Union, insofar their views shall be of key importance to shape policy formation at all stages of the policy cycle;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 96 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 3
3. Believes that a digital company may be considered European only if its registered office and its main decisstakeholder should be granted listening priority for the sake of formation of EU policies on condition- taking centres, R & D centres and manufacturing sites are on European terrihat it can be demonstrated, through objective indicatorys and if it is controlled by European capital and subject to the consolidated tax on European territoryvailable to the public, that its main interest centres are located in the Union;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 97 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 3 a (new)
3a. Strongly suggests that such objective indicators take into consideration a comprehensive array of factors, including legal registration, procedures for adoption of strategic decisions, shareholders' composition, fiscal residence, physical location of a majority of its workforce and, as applicable in each case, the main location of research, development, manufacturing and service activities;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 119 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 5
5. Recalls that data are the raw material, including metadata, are both a key material and an essential asset of the digital economy, and that they play a fundamental role in the added value chain; stresses that storing or processing data outside Europe is tantamount to killing off Europe's digital economy; demands that the storage, exploitation and use optimisation of data be carried out by European companies on the territory of the Unionthe strategic implications of transmitting, storing or processing data, including metadata, outside the territory of the Union must be carefully assessed, with the help of a risk assessment methodology developed with the contribution of all major EU digital stakeholders;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 126 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 6
6. Proposes that the governance of ORCID and DOI be under European jurisdiction with regard to European scientists and their workCalls on the Commission to study and propose for their adoption an array of legal acts that guarantee that data- sharing mechanisms regarding the work of EU research institutions and their scientists stay safely under the Union's jurisdiction;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 128 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 6 a (new)
6a. Reminds that any agreement for sharing scientific data with third countries must be designed and implemented under the strict application of the principle of reciprocity, and must include requirements for equally shared governance;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 180 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 11
11. Stresses the existing potential that quantum technologies have for computers and encryption keysboth for general computation and, specifically, for advanced cryptography;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 192 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 12
12. BelievStresses that the failure to control the European digital industry poses a threat to civil liberties, respdigital activities must be regulated ensuring strict respect of fundamental rights, with a particular attention for privacy, insofar privacy functions, as leading experts in the sect for privacy and the current and future employmenthave remarked, as the true immune system of a living democracy;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 199 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 14
14. Asks Member States and the Union to encourage and fund the writinglarge-scale development of secure free software, with Linux, firstly withina first priority towards public administrations and schoolst all levels and academy, and then intowards businesses and for the general public; calls the Commission to develop guidelines and criteria for orienting public procurement in such direction, wherever the Member States consider fit to do so;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 203 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15
15. Considers it essential to encourage synergies between Europeanamong EU digital stakeholders at all levels, as a key ingredient of an ambitious industrial strategy in the digital sector, and especially among hardware manufacturers, software developers and European cloud computing providers;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 207 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 16
16. Highlights the importance ofat long-term EU security of supply in critical raw materials such as rare earths in order to keep the construction of electronic components in Europeraw materials that are critical for the construction of electronic components, such as rare earths, must be achieved through a combination of the best practices of the circular economy, including design-to-recycle, but not limited to it, and fair trade agreements with producing countries;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 219 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 18
18. Proposes the creation of European computer assembly chains, with robotics enabling them to be competitiveUnderlines that manufacturing excellence consistently delivered at unprecedented levels, including the extensive use of robotics, additive manufacturing and automation, shall be necessary for the successful implementation of EU digital industrial projects;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 224 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 19
19. Demands a European preference for reciprocalStresses that trade policy is an essential component of international relations; reminds that digital industry, due to a variety of reasons, and very especially to its high value added, and its richness in continuous innovation, is a clear candidate for long-term intensive trade;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 225 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 19 a (new)
19a. Asks, in such a trade relations context, to guarantee the commitment of the Union to its major values of peace, friendship and cooperation among countries, as expressed in the principle of reciprocity, among others, and to ensure that this principle is solidly embedded into all agreements in the field;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 237 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 22
22. Calls for a Copernican revolution in the digital economic model: 'all data is the property of the provider' and anyone using these data should remunerate the data provider, with class actions being filed against any company using data without remunerationin-depth review of the value-sharing models, encompassing all parties, that need to be fairly established in order to ensure stability of any digital business model; reminds that individual data providers must claim and keep collectively a fair share of the value being created;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 239 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 22 a (new)
22a. Stresses that business models based on remuneration through data, often in the absence of direct monetary remuneration, must be much better studied and regulated, providing adequate legal coverage for all parties engaged in them;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 243 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 23
23. Proposes that Member States impose dissuasive fines on companies illegally using data, amounting Reminds that the speedy development of a carefully thought legal framework, having data protection, privacy and fundamental rights at its core, can become a distinctive, high-value competitive factor four to ten times their turnover, thereby making Europe a safe haven for data storage in the worldr EU providers of data storage, in comparisons with competitors less attentive to this dimension; accordingly, underlines that privacy and data protection requirements should never be contemplated by the IT industry as a burden;
2016/10/25
Committee: ITRE