France is reshaping its public-sector IT to boost control over data and infrastructure, with the france linux transition at the core of a new digital strategy.
The French government has formally decided to reduce its reliance on proprietary software and cloud services originating outside the European Union. This shift is framed as a matter of strategic risk and long-term security, not just cost or convenience.
On the official numérique website, the direction interministérielle du numérique (DINUM) outlined its position on what it labels “extra-European” technology. However, the text makes clear that American vendors, including Microsoft, are a primary concern for policymakers.
Moreover, the strategy document emphasizes that excessive dependence on external suppliers undermines what Paris defines as digital sovereignty. The goal is to retain control over rules, pricing, data flows, and technical roadmaps critical to state operations.
One of the most concrete steps in this plan is DINUM’s call to exit Windows in favor of workstations running on the Linux operating system. This marks a significant change for thousands of public-sector desktops and laptops across ministries and agencies.
Under the new guidance, ministries must map every dependency on extra-European technologies and present an “exit” roadmap by the fall. However, a detailed implementation calendar for the operating system migration has not yet been made public.
That said, the move extends far beyond desktop operating systems. DINUM states that the same logic should apply across “all of its tech,” including productivity tools, collaboration platforms, and infrastructure services.


