Goodbye Google: European Parliament picks Qwant as default search engine

Key Takeaway

– European Parliament switching Firefox/Edge default search from Google to Qwant
– Framed as commitment to “digital sovereignty” amid EU push to reduce reliance on US tech
– Qwant is developing its own search index with Ecosia (Staan), not just using Bing
– MEPs and staff can still manually switch back to Google or any other engine
– Many other dependencies (Windows, Office, hardware) remain unchanged


European Parliament Switches to Qwant Search Engine

Starting this Thursday, MEPs typing a query into the address bar of Firefox or Edge will no longer get Google results. The European Parliament is switching its default search engine to Qwant — a French rival that promises not to track users or collect personal data, according to an internal email reported by Euractiv.

Symbolic Move Against US Tech Giants

The move looks small but is symbolically loaded. Google controls roughly 90% of Europe’s search market, and EU institutions use US software heavily — Microsoft’s Office suite being one of the major ones among them. The Parliament is framing the swap as part of its commitment to “digital sovereignty,” and the timing is no accident too: it comes one day after the European Commission unveiled a whole package of proposals meant to loosen the bloc’s dependence on American tech giants.

Qwant’s Search Index Development

One of the most interesting wrinkles is Qwant itself. The company has long piggybacked on Microsoft’s Bing index to deliver results — hardly independence. But it is now co-developing its own index, dubbed Staan, alongside fellow European engine Ecosia. That probably explains the Parliament’s pick as being a bet on homegrown infrastructure, instead of a rebranded front end.

No Mandatory Lockdown for Users

It’s important to note that nobody is forced offline. MEPs can still switch their default back to Google or any other engine; Qwant is simply the out-of-the-box choice for the Parliament’s 720 lawmakers and thousands of staff.

  • Qwant does not track users or collect personal data
  • New search index called Staan is being co-developed with Ecosia
  • Parliament aims to reduce dependency on US tech infrastructure

Remaining Dependencies on US Software

Also, plenty of other dependencies — Windows, Office, foreign-built phones and email clients — are still firmly established.

Sources

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *