Europe set 2030 as a date to dismantle its reliance on US financial infrastructure like Visa/Mastercard payments; it's happening far quicker.

https://futurology.today/post/9520642

Europe set 2030 as a date to dismantle its reliance on US financial infrastructure like Visa/Mastercard payments; it's happening far quicker. - Futurology Today

Now that the US sees the EU as a potential enemy, Europe has moved to ensure its financial system can never be sanctioned or shut down; something the US has done to Russia, Cuba, and Iran. By late 2025, efforts centered on the Digital Euro [https://www.techcentral.ie/european-lawmakers-reach-breakthrough-on-digital-euro/], a nonprofit payment system run by the European Central Bank (like euro cash). Due by 2030, it would offer lower fees and quickly replace much Visa and Mastercard usage. While still in development, other solutions arrived sooner. Instant bank-to-bank payments, bypassing cards, are expanding rapidly. In February, 130 million users across 13 national systems were linked in a Europe-wide network aiming to cover all of Europe. Fees are a fraction of Visa/Mastercard, though unlike the Digital Euro, it’s not yet available as a debit card; only online and on phones. The EU also wants to decouple from US software and is preparing its own alternative to Microsoft Office. Europe Is Breaking Up With Visa and Mastercard — and It’s a $24 Trillion Problem [https://europeanbusinessmagazine.com/business/europes-24-trillion-breakup-with-visa-and-mastercard-has-begun/] Europe builds Microsoft-alternative ‘Euro-Office’ to reclaim digital sovereignty [https://tech.eu/2026/03/27/europe-builds-microsoft-compatible-euro-office-to-reclaim-digital-sovereignty/]

It is high time that a European, cross-border payment service was established. This should have happened decades ago.

To me, a regulated payment standard like UPI in India seems to make the most sense. But I also find decentralized approaches, such as the GNU Taler, interesting.

Two thing is important, though: It can’t happen fast enough. This can’t happen fast enough, and under no circumstances should we rely on private companies again.

Unified Payments Interface - Wikipedia

This should have happened decades ago.

It never happened because governments are corrupted and don’t serve the public.

It didn’t happen in the past because all software companies were monopolies, i.e. google, microsoft. and the same applied to banking.

that’s changing now.

Alternatives to these monopolies have always been around, at the government they use special encrypted computers and phones to make sure their own communications and data is secure.