No, EU does not "plan to create a great firewall". It's an analytical report produced by a consulting company from Hamburg that comes up with a suggestion about creating an "European cloud/firewall" and further details suggest they don't quite understand the meaning of either word.
The report is not EU law. It's exactly what it is - a rather silly report produced by a consulting company on order from a EP agency.
P.S. it has nothing to do with 5G and deep state
@kravietz This report will have a part to play in shaping the discussion of future EU policy. Policy writers understand the internet even less than the writers of this report. The report itself demonstrates that the animus for policy like this exists. Specific lines stand out as especially bald illustrations of the zeitgeist and incentives motivating certain decision makers.
Sure it will "have a part" - maybe around 0.001%. I was both contracted to write such reports (on electronic signature) and took part in public consultations on my own initiative. EU legislation is very long and multi-step process in which you can also have a say if you only pay attention. It has also many stakeholders and some of them certainly are fascinated by China or by Putin, which is quite natural in democracy. But it doesn't mean their vision will become law.
@kravietz I think the part it has to play will be larger than 0.001%, but I'm comfortable waiting it out and seeing for myself. If I'm wrong, I'll eat my humble pie.
Why exactly do you think so?
The fact that we're discussing it here isn't actually a very good prognosis for the "Chinese firewall" folks, especially as we're discussing an early pre-regulatory report. I've seen a number of really stupid ideas being trashed at this stage - e.g. a few years ago someone lobbied for ban on open-source firmware for routers and mobile phones, and it was killed in the public consultation stage. I really started to appreciate the EU regulatory process after a few cases like this.