Summary
Today’s most important software story is not a new feature release. It is the growing fight over VMware in Europe, where cloud providers are asking regulators to intervene before Broadcom’s changes reshape who gets to sell and support a core piece of enterprise infrastructure.
Why This Matters
This Is About Real Control Over Enterprise Software
Reuters reported that CISPE, the Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe group, urged EU antitrust regulators on March 19 to temporarily stop Broadcom from ending VMware’s Cloud Service Provider programme in Europe. The group says the move would exclude most European cloud providers from selling VMware products, leaving only a small number of selected partners in place.
That Makes This More Than a Partner Dispute
VMware is deeply embedded in enterprise infrastructure. When access to that ecosystem changes, the effects do not stay neatly inside vendor contracts. They spill into pricing, service continuity, migration strategy, and customer choice. That is why this story matters to the broader software market: it is really about who gets to control a foundational enterprise platform after a major acquisition.
Why Europe Is Pushing Back
The Complaint Is About Harm, Not Just Frustration
According to Reuters, CISPE says Broadcom’s January 2026 decision would irreparably damage both cloud providers and their customers. The group is asking the European Commission to suspend the termination of the programme, readmit providers, and add protections against retaliation. Broadcom and the Commission did not immediately comment, according to the report.
The Old Antitrust Debate Is Now Becoming Practical
CISPE had already sued the European Commission last year over its approval of Broadcom’s VMware acquisition, saying regulators failed to assess the deal properly. What makes today’s story more consequential is that the criticism is no longer theoretical. The market is now dealing with the lived effects of post-merger power.
What the Industry Should Watch
Software Consolidation Is Still a Customer Story
Big software mergers are often discussed in abstract language about synergies and efficiency. But the practical question is much simpler: do customers end up with more choice and better terms, or fewer routes to market and less leverage? Europe’s VMware fight is a sharp example of that issue landing in the real world.
Are your product and brand truly aligned — or are key details getting lost?
Final Perspective
The Broadcom-VMware dispute matters because it captures a tension the software industry keeps circling back to: when a platform becomes essential, changes to access and distribution can become a competition issue very quickly. Europe is now testing where that line sits.
