Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

Open letter to Europe by André Rogaczewski CEO and co-founder of Netcompany: Europe must stand tall

News

Open letter to Europe by André Rogaczewski CEO and co-founder of Netcompany: Europe must stand tall
News

News

Open letter to Europe by André Rogaczewski CEO and co-founder of Netcompany: Europe must stand tall

2025-04-23 12:29 Last Updated At:12:51

COPENHAGEN, Denmark--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apr 23, 2025--

The following is an open letter by André Rogaczewski CEO and co-founder of Netcompany:

More Images

André Rogaczewski, CEO Netcompany

André Rogaczewski, CEO Netcompany

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250422921783/en/

Europeans,

This is your digital awakening.

We all know that leading technologically is paramount for competitiveness and the creation of growth, prosperity, and welfare.

Europe’s digital backbone is to a large extent built on systems we don’t necessarily control. From data centers to cloud systems – in the applications and algorithms that shape our decisions.

While we rely on digital services in all our core societal areas— communication, financial services, welfare benefits, pensions, healthcare, even elections—the digital applications and infrastructures behind are too often dependent on non-European systems.

What we need is a response. To protect our individual rights, and shape a digital European ecosystem rooted in our own democratic values – not those imposed by people who no longer necessarily share our beliefs.

That’s why Netcompany launched a campaign on the night of 22 April by illuminating the Statue of Liberty in Paris with the message: “Stand Tall Europe”.

We chose the Statue of Liberty because it stands as a symbol of freedom, justice, the end of oppression, and opportunity for all. A gift from Europe to the US symbolising the values we created together and used to share. It seems now that Europe herself alone is facing the challenge of protecting those same ideals in a digital world.

Where the Statue of Liberty lifts a torch, Europe’s task today is to light the digital path forward—by asserting digital sovereignty, defending rights online, and building our own trusted secure systems and applications that our societies can rely on and prosper with.

We must embrace the digital revolution, establish more European datacenters, set up trusted age-verification systems to protect our children, and ensure our voters are not filled with digital propaganda.

We must quickly build trustworthy, robust, fair, and transparent applications and systems showing everyone else that responsible digital transformation is the way to create world-leading innovation, growth and progress.

That means offensively using AI designed with European values and transparency to create efficient European private and public administration. It means developing intelligent digital twins for our physical infrastructure across all industries to uniquely optimise European businesses. In fact, we must build world leading digital applications for Europe to become a leading region of the world.

We are calling for more European solutions—built by European companies, accountable to European citizens.

Europe’s future prosperity and growth depends on it and hence it also depends on our ability to attract, develop, and unite diverse world-class talent from everywhere.

We must make this continent the most attractive destination for the world’s sharpest minds.

This is also a call for all of you who want to contribute to the European digital awakening, wherever you are. We need you.

There’s no quick fix. But we are ready. We believe in a digital future where Europe owns more of its systems, protects its citizens, and leads with integrity.

Let’s take back the future.

Yours sincerely,

André Rogaczewski

CEO and co-founder of Netcompany

About André Rogaczewski

​André Rogaczewski founded Netcompany in 2000 and has overseen its evolution into one of Europe’s fastest growing and most successful IT services companies, with a global headcount of +8,250 talented employees across +10 European countries.

With his technical background, a master's degree in computer science from Aalborg University and a true vision for society’s digital future, he has led the company through tremendous growth and built a unique delivery model unmatched elsewhere in the IT industry. André was born in Poland and grew up in Aalborg, Denmark.

About Netcompany

Founded in 2000 in Copenhagen, Denmark, Netcompany provides essential IT solutions for both societal and business needs, aiding our private and public clients in their digital evolution towards a more efficient and sustainable future.

Our team of skilled professionals drives sustainable innovation, consistently advancing and expanding our impact - one solution at a time.

By building flexible, scalable and secure digital solutions, we help Europe lead the way towards responsible digitalisation.

André Rogaczewski, CEO Netcompany

André Rogaczewski, CEO Netcompany

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

Statue of Liberty at Pont de Grenelle last night in Paris – Iluminated with the message ”Stand Tall Europe”.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Giannis Antetokounmpo blocked a shot by LeBron James and stole the ball from him on consecutive possessions in the final minute, and the Milwaukee Bucks blew a fourth-quarter lead before rallying for a 105-101 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday night.

Kevin Porter Jr. scored 22 points, and he hit two free throws to break a tie after Antetokounmpo blocked a driving layup attempt by James with 39 seconds left.

Antetokounmpo then knocked the ball out of James' hands from behind with 2 seconds left, and Porter hit two more free throws to seal Milwaukee's fifth win in seven games — its first over a team with a winning record since Dec. 11. Antetokounmpo finished with 21 points in his lowest-scoring effort since returning from his right calf strain.

Luka Doncic had 24 points and nine assists on 8-of-25 shooting for the Lakers. He had his lowest-scoring performance since Christmas, and he fouled out on Porter's 3-point attempt with 16.2 seconds to play.

James had 26 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds, but Antetokoumpo got the best of the top scorer in NBA history at crunch time. Los Angeles has lost six of 10.

Milwaukee surged to a double-digit lead in the first half even with Antetokounmpo on a minutes restriction in his injury return. Doncic scored 12 points in the third quarter but also committed four fouls in the period, including his fifth of the game.

Los Angeles abruptly erased its deficit by going on a 17-4 run to open the fourth, with James putting the Lakers ahead when he stole the ball from Antetokounmpo for a layup with 6:02 left. Milwaukee missed nine of its first 12 shots in the period, but Porter's layup tied it with two minutes left.

Lakers starters Austin Reaves and Rui Hachimura remain sidelined by injury, but Hachimura (calf) might return early next week from his six-game absence, coach JJ Redick said.

Bucks: At Denver on Sunday.

Lakers: At Sacramento on Monday.

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA

Los Angeles Lakers guard Marcus Smart, left, tries to shoot as Milwaukee Bucks guard Gary Trent Jr. defends during the first half of an NBA basketball game Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Los Angeles Lakers guard Marcus Smart, left, tries to shoot as Milwaukee Bucks guard Gary Trent Jr. defends during the first half of an NBA basketball game Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic, left, and Milwaukee Bucks guard Kevin Porter Jr. go after a loose ball during the first half of an NBA basketball game Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic, left, and Milwaukee Bucks guard Kevin Porter Jr. go after a loose ball during the first half of an NBA basketball game Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Recommended Articles