
If France could lead the world with Minitel in the 1980s, surely Europe can free itself from Silicon Valley’s shackles now? | Alexander Hurst
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/feb/27/france-minitel-1980s-europe-silicon-valley-shackles
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Back then, France punched above its weight when it came to tech. The EU needs it to rediscover its taste for the cutting edge
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In the 1960s, France became the third country, after the US and Soviet Union, to independently place a satellite (Astérix) into orbit, and the only country to send an animal into space and – crucially, for Félicette the catstronaut – bring it back alive. A decade later, the Franco-British Concorde flicked passengers across the Atlantic in three and a half hours and the TGV began to propel them through the countryside first at 250km/h (155mph), and then 320km/h. Then, in the late 1980s, the French space agency designed a crewed spaceplane, Hermès, that corrected for the Nasa space shuttle’s vulnerability by being integrated into its launch vehicle rather than perched atop it.
A concerted buildout of nuclear power left France with one of the least carbon-intensive economies in the world. And then, of course, there was the Minitel. More than a decade before anyone was typing “www” into their web browsers, French users were able to buy train tickets, check film showings, do their banking, play games, find recipes, read their horoscopes, or even log into, yes, erotic chats – la messagerie rose, as it was known.
Obsessed with independence and sovereignty, the postwar French state excelled at driving technology that served a collective purpose – something that offers a lesson to the European Union as it seeks tech “sovereignty” from the US and broader answers to questions about what kind of tech is needed, and by whom.
Why look back at all this now? Because as a new “made in Europe” industrial policy responds to competition from the US and China, the EU has a chance not just to resist the Trump administration’s pressure to surrender laws that place restrictions on hate speech and illegal online content but to break free of US tech domination entirely and reimagine what kind best serves European citizens.
The Minitel was initially an electronic phone book system with a screen and a fold-down keyboard. It could find people even when their names were misspelled, as long as they were phonetic, as well as display information about businesses, including their location on a map. As a 1982 news report showed, the first users thought of it as a gadget more than a life-changing technology.
By the late 1980s, 20% of French homes had a Minitel terminal, and – perhaps between the games and the chats – found their usage bills exploding, leading to the entry into the market of Mistral, a device that proposed to download up to 60 Minitel pages at a time so that users could consult them offline, where time no longer cost money.
Most people think of the internet as an American, or perhaps Anglo-American, phenomenon; in reality, it’s a deeply Franco-American-British beast, with a purely French detour, a ghost of what-once-was. At the same time as the US was developing Arpanet, the predecessor to the internet, French researchers were on the case. They divided, however, into two competing camps, Cyclades and Transpac, split by the idea of decentralised networks (where packets of data, “datagrams”, took whatever route was available to them and were reassembled into coherent information at their final destination) versus centralised ones (where data followed itself successively, like train cars on a railway).
France Télécom supported Transpac’s centralised closed system, and, to spur adoption, offered free Minitel terminals in order to monetise their use. The number of services France Télécom offered jumped from 145 to 2,074 in a just a year, between 1984 and 1985.
This success was partly its downfall. Minitel’s orderly, predetermined dataflow meant that the network had trouble scaling. Some will look at this, smirk, and think, “So the government backed the wrong technology and lost out to the market.” I want to challenge that with a different takeaway: the Minitel was overtaken by the internet not because the government brought it to life, but because France Télécom insisted on end-to-end control as a way to monetise it – exactly the same mechanism behind the way that behemoth tech monopolies have, as Cory Doctorow writes, “enshittified” the modern internet.
Centralisation worked, but only to a point, and Minitel hit that point roughly around the same time that France did. The US tech monopolies that came to dominate were those whose venture capital-subsidised prime directive was to amass a giant self-perpetuating user base – at which point the sheer number of English speakers and the scale of the US stock market took over. Tech shifted from something that had largely socially net-positive collective implications to the deeply individualised, but socially net-negative, focus of capturing attention and extracting user data.
With Germany calling on budget-constrained France to increase its defence spending, all of Europe would do well to acknowledge that much of what European technology does exist – from nuclear energy to space exploration, to telecommunications (think Eutelsat, an alternative to Starlink), to chip manufacture, frontier AI (Mistral AI is a French company, whose name winks back to the Minitel era), and quantum computing (Pasqal) – comes from the French government’s stubborn refusal to cede to market logic and forgo capacity in all these areas.
But even political will can run into a wall of sheer scale. For all its foresight, France could not, and cannot, climb that wall on its own – only a more integrated EU can.
Even more important, though, is what kind of tech we are going to end up living with. The US had the scale (and the public subsidies) to “win”, but what a hollow victory it has shoved on the rest of us: monopolistic, big tech run amok. Like big tobacco and big oil before it, Silicon Valley has saddled us with the costs: overpowered democratic systems and the devastation of lost attention spans, fractured mental health and social isolation. Even to the tragedy of ads in the Paris Métro promoting an American AI whose purpose is that it, not another human, will be your “friend”.
The EU needs to regain sovereign control over the technology that controls so much of our lives. But it can choose to do so in a way that puts us more firmly back in democratic control of the technology itself. Arguing over the merits of deregulation, as Germany wants, versus a government-led approach, as France favours, is, in this sense, a false debate. Some markets are worth competing in, some aren’t. The EU, should it recognise it, is lucky enough to have the scale to choose which ones to close off and cast aside.
“lead the world” . . .
Portugal led the world in exploration 500 years ago, so surely Europe can lead the world in space exploration, right?
The main problem is, as always, capital. We had technology leaders in Europe but they almost always get bought by the Americans
First of all at the time there were multiple similar systems available globally and they all were strictly domestic. None of them lead the world but some were more capable than others.
I‘ve read an IDC report in 2016 about the necessary investment to replicate a full on Amazon cloud at the time, since management had the weird idea they could do that for 1 billion Euro. The conclusion of the report was that for a full 1:1 copy you would need to invest 38 billion US Dollar.
I hope that answers your question and keep in mind we are now 10 years further along and have to adjust for added developments and inflation.
Minitel went nowhere…
The europe machine is driven by exploitation. Last 500 years it was abroad but it’s moved home in the last 50. It works for a while when you are super rich and fast growing, but it’s weaned off. Europe does not grow, even as it tries to bring in more foreign labour to be more productive, despite the local backlash. The system has become efficient at taxation and bureaucracy of its so called perfect democratic model based on imperialism/capitalism abroad and socialism at home. It will have to collapse or reinvent itself before any real innovation comes out of there. And we know how good Europe is at change and moving with speed. I’ve met many french young men and women with no drive to innovate, or have tried and given up because of the system.
The problem with French tech is that it’s often “too French” to reach a broader market appeal even in other European countries.
If Spotify (a Swedish company) was French it would be called Fauré, have a user interface that’s different just for the sake of being different, and at least 20% of the songs on the platform would be francophone per government mandate.
Sometimes this approach works (Claire Obscure comes to mind), but more often it doesn’t.
I think that attitude needs to change a bit.
The US forces China to divide and sell the US TikTok to them so they can leverage it for population control instead of letting China push their own narrative freely to the US population. China is famous for their control and the great firewall of China. Russia controls their web with the illusion of free speech. The UK is trying to get in control of their internet traffic as well.
Europe needs to be protectionist as well, we are being eaten alive by playing with a different ruleset as everybody else out there.
Don’t allow our rising companies to be bought out by foreign nations over and over again and don’t allow foreign nations to buy up housing. Stop the bleeding and we will be able to show exactly just how strong we are.
We don’t live in those times where any larger country could produce everything they needed within their borders. We live at an era where any successful company is hyper specialized and needs global supply chains to make it work.
I think Yanis Varoufakis was arguing for this well over a decade ago – that the EU needed to do the same as the US and China, and develop its own tech alternatives to Google, Meta, AWS, Microsoft, Nvidia, Apple, TSMC etc…
It’s still worth doing, but that ship has probably sailed now. Pretty much all European phones and computers, banking, health and education systems etc… are entirely reliant on US software and Asian hardware. It would require some unprecedented protectionist policies and isolationism to change that, which would have severe economic consequences. Otherwise any European company entering that space will just get drowned out by scale and convenience.
Perhaps adapting more Chinese software could be beneficial, simply to diversify political and economic risk. Rather than the current situation, with an almost complete reliance on the US tech giants.
Only someone who has never used minitel could say something like this
Got to be careful with that logic though… I wonder if the minitel wasn’t a drag on development in France overall.
35-15 ULLA however I guess was a good precursor to all the online trash we know drown in.
Whatever happened to Ministral / Mistral?
If Finland could lead the world in bricky mobile phones in the early 2000’s, then surely
**Back then, France punched above its weight when it came to tech. The EU needs it to rediscover its taste for the cutting edge**
Fri 27 Feb 2026 06.00 CET
In the 1960s, France became the third country, after the US and Soviet Union, to independently place a satellite (Astérix) into orbit, and the only country to send an animal into space and – crucially, for Félicette the *catstronaut* – [bring it back alive](https://www.ina.fr/ina-eclaire-actu/video/caf93019883/felicette-la-1ere-chatte-astronaute). A decade later, the Franco-British Concorde flicked passengers across the Atlantic in three and a half hours and the TGV began to propel them through the countryside first at 250km/h (155mph), and then 320km/h. Then, in the late 1980s, the French space agency designed a [crewed spaceplane](https://www.futura-sciences.com/sciences/actualites/vols-habites-hermes-occasion-ratee-europeens-etre-autonomes-vols-habites-95897/), Hermès, that corrected for the Nasa space shuttle’s vulnerability by being integrated into its launch vehicle rather than perched atop it.
A concerted buildout of nuclear power left France with one of the [least carbon-intensive economies](https://www.theglobaleconomy.com/France/carbon_intensity/#:~:text=The%20latest%20value%20from%202024,on%20data%20from%20176%20countries.) in the world. And then, of course, there was the Minitel. More than a decade before anyone was typing “www” into their web browsers, French users were able to buy train tickets, check film showings, do their banking, play games, find recipes, read their horoscopes, or even log into, yes, erotic chats – *la messagerie* *rose*, as it was known.
Obsessed with independence and sovereignty, the postwar French state excelled at driving technology that served a collective purpose – something that offers a lesson to the [European Union](https://www.theguardian.com/world/eu) as it seeks tech “sovereignty” from the US and broader answers to questions about what kind of tech is needed, and by whom.
Why look back at all this now? Because as a new “made in Europe” industrial policy responds to competition from the US and China, the EU has a chance not just to resist the Trump administration’s pressure [to surrender laws that place restrictions ](https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/feb/19/us-builds-website-that-will-allow-europeans-to-view-blocked-content)on hate speech and illegal online content[ ](https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/feb/19/us-builds-website-that-will-allow-europeans-to-view-blocked-content)but to break free of US tech domination entirely and reimagine what kind best serves European citizens.
The Minitel was initially an electronic phone book system with a screen and a fold-down keyboard. It could find people even when their names were misspelled, as long as they were phonetic, as well as [display information](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4rok73O9A4) about businesses, including their location on a map. As a [1982 news report showed](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4rok73O9A4), the first users thought of it as a gadget more than a life-changing technology.
By the late 1980s, 20% of French homes had a Minitel terminal, and – perhaps between the games and the chats – found their usage bills exploding, leading to the entry into the market of Mistral, a device that proposed to download up to 60 Minitel pages at a time so that users could consult them offline, where time no longer cost money.
Most people think of the internet as an American, or perhaps Anglo-American, phenomenon; in reality, it’s a deeply Franco-American-British beast, with a purely French detour, a ghost of what-once-was. At the same time as the US was developing Arpanet, the predecessor to the internet, French researchers were on the case. They divided, however, into two competing camps, [Cyclades and Transpac](https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2021/03/29/la-france-aurait-elle-vraiment-pu-inventer-internet_6074880_1650684.html), split by the idea of decentralised networks (where packets of data, “datagrams”, took whatever route was available to them and were reassembled into coherent information at their final destination) versus centralised ones (where data followed itself successively, like train cars on a railway).
How did Minitel compare to BTX in Germany, it was basically the same era right? I have a very vague memory of BTX, you could look up train schedules and connect to other businesses somehow, but I guess Minitel was more capable?
It’s hard to compete with US when they can waste away healthcare and education money on venture investing that goes bust. Europeans are a lot more cautious and there’s a lot less to go around.
With regard to devices and applications, much of the problem is lazy/ignorant consumers – they just use what comes with their device and never think about the negatives of what they use or the positives of changing their choices. Plenty of alternatives around.
And Europe, when it puts its mind and money into a plan, usually led by the French can outdo the Americans. The best example is Airbus, set up because Boeing had a near monopoly on commercial aeroplanes. Airbus is now world leading and Boeing while still a major player, is having problems.
Delusional
Apart from a bit of nostalgia this article presents absolutely nothing in terms of a plan.
Grain of salt, this is in the Guardian, a publication informed by ideology not reality.