21 comments

  • Jigsy 50 minutes ago
    The problem with "child abuse" is that some countries classify drawing things as "child abuse," or "rape," or "animal abuse." (Something I don't agree with.)

    I mentioned in another thread a few weeks back that I got raided by the British police last February for "uploading/downloading "illegal" anime artwork on one of the (anime) artwork websites we're criminally investigating." (Yes, the British police are criminally investigating artwork websites, and I'm still under investigation at the time of writing this.)

    Even if somehow the government were able to catch everybody who abuse children, take photos and upload them to sites on Tor, they can classify anything they like as "child abuse" in order to justify survillancing people and restricting further freedoms.

    What's even sadder is that people don't care about safety. They care about the illusion of safety. As long as people have the illusion that they're being kept safe - the farce known as the Online Safety Bill being a great example - they'll tolerate any injustice.

    Honestly, I'd recommend downloading software like Signal, Session, VeraCrypt, etc. as well as making a Linux USB stick now (especially since countries like the UK wants Red Star OS levels of snooping) because this is honestly going to get much, much worse...

    • habinero 26 minutes ago
      I was curious and searched to find more context and ... uh, no offense but what on earth have you been doing that you've been tangling with the law over CSAM for at least four years?
      • Jigsy 25 minutes ago
        Watching anime, looking at anime artwork, reading manga since 2006.

        Why else would you criminally investigate artwork websites if your aim is not to arrest artists and those who look at their artwork? (And eventually use them as an excuse to show why encryption is evil, and how "evil artists" could be caught more easily if it was backdoored.)

        If you're looking for news, there won't be any yet as, as I said, I'm still under investigation.

  • yoan9224 2 hours ago
    The cycle of proposing the same surveillance legislation under different names is exhausting. Chat Control, ProtectEU, Going Dark - same invasive proposals, different branding.

    What's particularly concerning is the metadata retention scope: "which websites you visit, and who is communicating with whom, when and how often" with "the broadest possible scope of application" including VPN services. This isn't about protecting children or fighting terrorism anymore - it's about normalizing mass surveillance through legislative attrition. Keep proposing it until opposition fatigues and it slips through.

    The only sustainable solution is enshrining privacy rights into constitutional law with penalties for repeated attempts to circumvent them. Otherwise we'll be fighting Chat Control 4.0, 5.0, 6.0 forever.

    • shevy-java 33 minutes ago
      > The only sustainable solution is enshrining privacy rights into constitutional law with penalties for repeated attempts to circumvent them.

      Yeah I also thought about this. Democracy needs some basic rules. Lobbyists try to not only get their laws into effect but undermine the democratic process.

  • ori_b 6 hours ago
    Until people lobby for these privacy rights to be enshrined in law, this will continue to be a problem.

    Defeating one bad law isn't enough.

    • BlackjackCF 6 hours ago
      These should be enshrined into law... and there needs to be some sort of rule to prevent lawmakers from trying to ram through laws with the same spirit without some sort of cool down period. The fact that lawmakers have tried to push the same crap multiple times in the last 4 years despite a ton of opposition and resistance is ridiculous.
      • idle_zealot 4 hours ago
        > there needs to be some sort of rule to prevent lawmakers from trying to ram through laws with the same spirit without some sort of cool down period

        This doesn't make any sense as policy. It's often the case that the first crack at a law has oversights that come to light and cause it to fail. Then a reworked version that takes those issues into consideration is brought forward and passes. That's the process functioning correctly.

        What might make sense is something akin to the judicial systems "dismissal with prejudice". A way for the vote on a law to fail and arguments to be made to bar similar laws from being resubmitted, at least for a time. So one vote to dismiss the bill, and another can be called to add prejudice.

        That sounds good to me. I'm not sure if it would actually yield good results in practice.

        • HNisCIS 3 hours ago
          Seconding "dismiss with prejudice", it's a concept in US legal proceedings to keep a prosecutor from continuing to pursue a case and it would make a lot of sense in the context of the EU. It seems like it's a common problem given the organizational structure, it seems like a very key missing mechanism.
      • goda90 4 hours ago
        People need to do a better job of voting out people who push such laws.
        • idle_zealot 4 hours ago
          That is how it's supposed to work. Civic engagement and average level of education make this unlikely though. Representatives as disconnected from their constituency as those in the US are a serious threat to democracy, and there's no silver bullet fix, just a lot of obvious reforms that are really hard to pass. (Campaign finance, ranked choice voting, education funding, punishing politicians who break the law...)
        • Uvix 3 hours ago
          Election cycles are unfortunately too long for that to work. Would need to reduce office terms to 2-3 months for "vote them out" to be viable.
          • alwa 3 hours ago
            Then again, some governing actually does need to get done. That’s not much time to do anything that requires patient coordination and thorough consideration—especially anything of any complexity—even when people broadly agree that it needs to happen.

            It’s also not much time to implement or reflect on anything: in the 2-3 month term, the new highway means construction noise and road closures, even if a year from now everyone might be glad to have a speedier commute.

            It seems like, when the elected representatives are disposable like that, the power to mold policy devolves to the permanent political classes instead: lobbyists, policy shops, people whose paycheck comes from purses other than the public one…

        • amelius 4 hours ago
          Good luck convincing people not to vote for anti-immigration measures and other populist ideas instead.
          • idle_zealot 1 hour ago
            You can absolutely frame enshrining privacy and punishing those who would spy on you in a populist way. The messaging writes itself. The problem is that anti-power populism is considered extremely dangerous and tamped down on far more strongly than the most virulent bigots and fascists.

            Populism is how you win votes, but only one form of populism is allowed. For now, at least.

          • greenmoon 1 hour ago
            [dead]
        • pessimizer 2 hours ago
          People get all of their information about what's going on in the world from people who are pushing these laws. People who contradict this information are suppressed or actually prosecuted by people who are pushing these laws. That is what these laws are intended to support. There are too many people talking to too many other people.

          You need to stop blaming the victims. Europe is banning entire classes of political speech and political parties. It's always been a right they reserved - Europe has never had guarantees of freedom of speech or association, but it used to even have to debate and defend suppressing Nazi speech and parties. Now, they don't: the average middle-class European now finds it a patriotic point of pride to explain how they don't allow the wrong speech in Europe, unlike stupid America. Absolute cows.

          If telling people that it's their own fault makes you feel better, you're part of the problem too. Perpetrators love when you blame victims. These garbage institutions of Europe are run by the same elites who have always run Europe, except secularly cleansed of any religious or moral obligation to the public. In America we understand that we would have secular nobles without noblesse oblige, and created a bill of rights. Europe wasn't expecting it and instead "declared" a list of suggestions.

          The only thing that keeps me optimistic is how weak the EU actually is, and the tendency of the citizenry of European countries to periodically purge all of their elites simultaneously.

          I do have a fear that Gladio permanently lowered Europe's IQ and level of courage, though. Being smart and brave was deadly after WWII.

    • mmooss 1 hour ago
      If people want this to stop, they need to go on offense. Keep proposing laws that move the needle the other way. If all you do is play defense, inevitably you'll lose.
    • LtWorf 4 hours ago
      Well the italian constitution says that freedom and secrecy of correspondence and any other form of communications are not to be violated.

      Not that anyone gives a shit, apparently. Laws are useless when governments aren't interested in applying them.

    • IlikeKitties 6 hours ago
      There are already MANY laws in the EU and Germany for me regarding privacy. All the proposals are blatantly illegal in Germany for example. Just recently our highest court declared large scale logging of DNS request as "very likely" illegal.
      • pcrh 6 hours ago
        A decent example being Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights:

        >1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.

        >2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.

        Specifically:

        >A 2014 report to the UN General Assembly by the United Nations' top official for counter-terrorism and human rights condemned mass electronic surveillance as a clear violation of core privacy rights guaranteed by multiple treaties and conventions and makes a distinction between "targeted surveillance" – which "depend[s] upon the existence of prior suspicion of the targeted individual or organization" – and "mass surveillance", by which "states with high levels of Internet penetration can [] gain access to the telephone and e-mail content of an effectively unlimited number of users and maintain an overview of Internet activity associated with particular websites". Only targeted interception of traffic and location data in order to combat serious crime, including terrorism, is justified, according to a decision by the European Court of Justice.[23]

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_8_of_the_European_Conv...

      • timschmidt 6 hours ago
        Similarly, the 4th amendment to the US Constitution reads in full:

        "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

        "papers, and effects" seems to cover internet communications to me (the closest analog available to the authors being courier mail of messages written on paper), but the secret courts so far seem to have disagreed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Foreign_Intellig...

        • Eddy_Viscosity2 5 hours ago
          SCOTUS will simply say that since the constitution didn't explicitly state that electronic data and communications was protected, then it isn't.

          Even if it did explicitly say that this information is protected, SCOTUS would just make up a new interpretation that would allow surveillance anyway. Same as they made up presidential immunity, even though all men being subject to the law was pretty explicit purpose of the founding of america. I mean, they had a whole revolution about it.

          • zdragnar 4 hours ago
            Text, phone calls and emails which are not encrypted are the equivalent of a postcard. They don't need to seize the effects, only observe them.

            Encrypting, end to end, would be the equivalent of posting a letter. The contents are concealed and thus are protected.

            • HNisCIS 2 hours ago
              Time to wiretap all of Congress and then have a bot post it all to mastodon...
            • golem14 4 hours ago
              Except, wiretapping was considered very illegal in the USA.
          • roenxi 5 hours ago
            > all men being subject to the law was pretty explicit purpose of the founding of america. I mean, they had a whole revolution about it.

            I don't think it is a feasible claim. Revolutionaries, by definition it seems to me, believe some men and the enacting of their principles are above the law. A revolutionary is someone who illegally revolts against the current law.

            And formally recognising presidential immunity isn't really as novel as the anti-Trump crowd wants to believe. If presidents were personally subject to the law for their official acts, most of them wouldn't be in a position to take on the legal risk of, eg, issuing executive orders. If something is done as an official act then the lawsuits have to target the official position and not the person behind them. That is how it usually works for an official position.

            • vanviegen 3 hours ago
              I think it wouldn't be unreasonable to expect the law to distinguish between official acts taken in an honest attempt to benefit the nation, and those taken to corruptly and brazenly benefit oneself.
        • socalgal2 1 hour ago
          I want privacy too but I don't think the 4th amendment is enough. The 4th amendment effectively covers what's in your house. It does not cover people and business outside your house. If you interact with someone else, they also have a right to use/remember the fact that you interacted with them, whether that's your family, friends, or some random business. You call someone on the phone, 3 parties are involved, you, the person you're calling, the company(s) you paid to make the call possible.
      • hexbin010 6 hours ago
        > There are already MANY laws in the EU and Germany for me regarding privacy

        Which apply equally to the government?

        • pavlov 6 hours ago
          Germany has a history of its government using data collected about citizens against them.

          Much legislation was created after WWII to try to prevent that from happening again.

          • rvnx 6 hours ago
            It hasn't stopped the German Interior Ministry from campaigning for EU-wide chat control and pushing to reinstate mass data retention
            • izacus 4 hours ago
              That's because this campaign is about changing that very law. Saying that "this is blatantly illegal" misses the basic point of this proposal being a CHANGE of the law that makes that illegal.
        • IlikeKitties 6 hours ago
          Yeah, a lot of them apply explicitly to the government. In Germany at least most privacy laws flow from Article 10 of our constitution and for example Article 8 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. Both of which have been used in the past to explicitly remove laws that violated privacy in the name of security.
    • delusional 6 hours ago
      Fix the problem the proposal tries to fix, and the proposal goes away. Until you fix the problem, the only proposal that exists will keep being the only one that exists.

      I suppose you could be politically nihilistic enough to think there's no reason for this law to exist, or that it's primarily some authoritarian suppression agenda, but I find that preposterous. Bruxelles is a lot of things, but authoritarian is not one of them. Child sexual exploitation is a problem, and it does demand a solution. If you don't like this one, find a better one.

      • Xelbair 6 hours ago
        I find it preposterous that anyone defends this agenda that flips concept of 'innocent until proven guilty' on it's head by collectively punishing everyone for POSSIBLE crimes of some individuals.

        In a way that any criminal will be easily able to circumvent by not following the law, so it doesn't even achieve it's goal.For example with one time pad exchanged outside of Eu's control + stenography messaging, bundled into 'illegal' app that works as VPN over HTTPS.

        I find it preposterous that this issue is pushed without any input from citizens in most of member states - as it wasn't a part of political campaign of either internal elections nor EU ones!

        i can keep going on and on. This isn't anything inevitable, this isn't anything that needs to be even solved. This is all done by a single lobbying group trying to push this for years.

        • SiempreViernes 3 hours ago
          And I find it exceedingly annoying how all this heated discussion about the dangers of chat control is held oh so far from the actual text of the proposals.

          For example: there is no actual proposed text for "ProtectEU", the name references a project to provide updates to legislation with a focus on security. All this talk about criminals circumventing the proposed law using VPN is just dreams you have.

        • rowanG077 3 hours ago
          Which lobbying group?
      • AnthonyMouse 5 hours ago
        > Fix the problem the proposal tries to fix, and the proposal goes away.

        Only it doesn't. Even if you completely solved CSAM, authoritarians would still be proposing things like this to go after "terrorists" or copyright infringers or what have you. Claiming that people can't have privacy unless there is zero crime is just claiming that people can't have privacy, and that'll be a no.

        Moreover, this proposal wouldn't completely solve CSAM. If the standard is that it has to be 100% effective then this won't work either.

        Whereas if the standard is that something has to be worth the cost, then this isn't.

        • SiempreViernes 3 hours ago
          But ProtectEU stuff is about organised crime, terrorism, cybersecurity, and countering Russian sabotage operations, not sure why you brought up CSAM.
      • trueismywork 6 hours ago
        Its like govt banning bleach and when chemical companies protest, the govt tells them to fix problem of people mixing bleach and vinegar. Its a problem, it has to be solved. If you dont like this, find another solution govt says.
        • delusional 6 hours ago
          It's also a bit like when the government bans opioids because they're an addictive narcotic, but then allows their use in specific circumstances where the benefit outweighs the downsides, and then works with the industry to try and make it harder to abuse them.

          It's like a lot of things.

          • trueismywork 5 hours ago
            But they aren't working with industry here.
            • delusional 4 hours ago
              We aren't at that part of the EU legislative process yet. First the commission agrees on a framework, then the working groups work with industry to fill out the details of the framework. That's standard EU process.
      • atq2119 6 hours ago
        This framing is extremely counterproductive, though.

        Most societal problems cannot be fixed entirely. There will always be child sex abuse just like there will always be murder, theft, tax evasion, and drunk driving. It makes sense to see if things can be improved, but any action proposed must be weighed against its downsides. Continued action by police is a good thing, but laws for that have been established for a long time, and the correct answer may well be that no further change to laws is required or appropriate.

        (Ab)using child sex abuse to push through surveillance overreach is particularly egregious considering that by all objective accounts most of it seems to happen in the real world among friends and family, without any connection to the internet.

        • delusional 4 hours ago
          > It makes sense to see if things can be improved, but any action proposed must be weighed against its downsides.

          This is that. What you are seeing, repeated attempts to discuss a proposal, is the process by which the EU bureaucracy weighs the downsides. When you see it being pushed, that's evidence that some member states do not find "the correct answer" to be "no further change". That will eventually necessitate a compromise, as all things do.

          > (Ab)using child sex abuse to push through surveillance overreach is particularly egregious

          You are editorializing to a degree that makes it impossible to have a rational discussion with you. You HAVE to assume the best in your political adversaries, otherwise you will fail to understand them. They are not abusing anything, and they don't think it's "surveillance overreach". They believe it to be just and fair, otherwise they wouldn't propose it.

          • Uvix 3 hours ago
            The people proposing it believe it to be to their own personal advantage. They don't necessarily believe it to be just and fair.
            • SiempreViernes 3 hours ago
              The commissioners are porposing

              > We will build resilience against hybrid threats by enhancing the protection of critical infrastructure, reinforcing cybersecurity, securing transport hubs and ports and combatting online threats.

              for their own personal benefit? What? (Quote from the ProtectEU document)

      • JoshTriplett 4 hours ago
        > Fix the problem the proposal tries to fix, and the proposal goes away. Until you fix the problem, the only proposal that exists will keep being the only one that exists.

        Unfortunately, politicians and lobbyists are a hard problem to solve.

      • timschmidt 6 hours ago
        The Epstein debacle seems to indicate that child sexual exploitation is a preferred method of entrapping, blackmailing, and controlling world political and science leaders and the wealthy. And implicates the same intelligence agencies calling for mass surveillance.
      • b00ty4breakfast 2 hours ago
        Intent is unimportant; the law itself is authoritarian. And if you think that there aren't nefarious actors waiting in the wings to take advantage of these kinds of laws, I got a bridge I'd like to sell you
      • MrNeon 6 hours ago
        I'm curious, what would you personally consider to be a step too far in the fight against CSAM?
        • delusional 4 hours ago
          Thank you so much for asking the question instead of assuming an answer.

          I don't think I have an ideological limit. I'm pro weighing alternatives, and seeing what happens. If law enforcement misuses the tools they are given, we should take them away again, but we shouldn't be afraid to give them tools out of fear of how they might misuse them.

          I think my limits are around proper governance. Stuff like requiring a warrant are hard limits for me. Things like sealed paper trail, that are too easily kept away from the public, are red flags. So long as you have good ways for the public to be informed that the law isn't working, or being misused, I don't have many hard limits, I don't think democracy really allows for hard limits.

          At the very broad level. I believe that Big Tech (Meta, Google, etc.) are already surveilling you. I believe that government should have at least as much ability to surveil you as companies. If you are willing to hand over that data to a company, you should be willing to hand it over to your government (specifically YOUR government, not the one the company is based in).

          • socalgal2 1 hour ago
            The obvious difference is a business (Meta, Google, etc..) can at most refuse to do business with you. The government can throw you in prison. Therefore, it's more important to restrict what the government can do than what business can to.

            yea I get a few companies have too much power. That doesn't really change the point except to argue that they too should be more restricted

      • like_any_other 5 hours ago
        > Fix the problem the proposal tries to fix, and the proposal goes away.

        Bullshit. We are by far - by FAR - the most surveilled we have ever been in history, including under the worst of the Stasi, yet they lie to us about "going dark". The most minuscule scrap of privacy is a problem to be solved to them.

        • SiempreViernes 3 hours ago
          Yeah, the Irish really should step up their GDPR enforcements.
      • cogman10 6 hours ago
        It's something that can't be fixed, so rather than trying to cure it through bad privacy invading laws we should be looking in how to mitigate the problem through good reporting, accountability laws, and therapy laws.

        A few examples of how mitigate the problem

        * Require 2 adults at all times when kids are involved. Particularly in churches and schools.

        * Establish mandatory reporting. None of this BS like "I'm a priest, I shouldn't have to report confessionals." That sort of religious exemption is BS.

        * Make therapy for pedophiles either fully subsidized or at least partially subsidized.

        * Require adult supervision of teens with kids (one of the more common sources of child sexual abuse).

        CSAM will happen. It's terrible and what's worse is even if the privacy invasion laws could 100% prevent that sort of content from being produce, that just raises the price of the product and pushes it to be off shored. No amount of chat control will stop someone from importing the material via a thumbdrive in the mail.

        The problem we have is the truth of "this will happen no matter the laws passed". That truth has allowed politicians to justify passing extreme laws for small but horrific problems.

        • izacus 4 hours ago
          This is a way more sick proposal of authoritarianism than any law that would allow cops to read chat messages with a warrant.
          • cogman10 4 hours ago
            Which part exactly?
  • SiempreViernes 4 hours ago
    If Mullvad could bother to link to this supposed "Presidency outcome paper" that would be great, after extensive searches on Concilium and eur-lex I have no idea what that is supposed to reference.

    In any case here's the actual "ProtectEU" text the Comission sent on the first of April which contains most of the text Mullvad is quoting from the "presidency outcome paper": https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A...

    As a bonus, here's input report listing the problems that are supposed to be solved: https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/document/download/05963640...

    This is from the introduction:

    > Access to this data is understood as access granted to law enforcement subject to judicial authorisation when required, in the context of criminal investigations and on a case-by-case basis. As a rule, in the cases where such judicial authorisation is necessary due to the sensitive nature of the data in question, it represents an integral part of the applicable legal and operational framework for facilitating access to this data by law enforcement. Access to data on behalf of law enforcement authorities must be achieved in full respect of data protection, privacy, and cybersecurity legislation, as well as the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) case-law on these matters and applicable standards on procedural safeguards.

  • Zealotux 6 hours ago
    In the ancient Greek colony of Locri, any who proposed a new law would do so with a rope around their neck, if the law was voted down, they would get hanged.

    Food for thought.

    • SamDc73 3 hours ago
      U.S. lawmaking has a built-in ratchet effect: passing new laws is politically easier than repealing old ones.

      An easy way to solve this is all laws should have an expiration date by default.

      • HNisCIS 2 hours ago
        Well, Congress renewed the Patriot act so I don't have a lot of faith. Personally I'm starting to think that all of Congress, including aides, should get cycled out all at once periodically so that their internal culture of hating the masses gets broken.
        • SamDc73 2 hours ago
          Fair point. The USA PATRIOT Act shouldn’t have existed in the first place. But one of its most controversial parts (Section 215) did expire in 2020 (it was barely going to make it, though).

          But you’re right overall: most of the Act’s powers were repeatedly renewed or re-created under other laws.

          Sunset clauses aren’t a silver bullet, but they do occasionally stop or slow things that would otherwise become permanent.

      • Obscurity4340 2 hours ago
        Excellent idea (re:mandatory expiration dates/sunset clauses)
    • simonebrunozzi 5 hours ago
      Zaleucus [0] from Locri wrote the first law system in the 7th century BC. Might be connected to what you have shared.

      Today's Locri is in Calabria, a region in Italy that many consider infested with mafia-like organizations, which is of course sad, but also ironic.

      [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zaleucus

      • quotemstr 5 hours ago
        Once social trust (or assibiyah, to use Ibn Khandun's term) in a region collapses, it often returns slowly or not at all. Sadly common pattern in history. I think one could plausibly argue that in this way, Calabria never recovered from the collapse of antiquity, the Gothic wars, and generations spent as a Christian-Muslim war zone.
    • kgwxd 5 hours ago
      I don't think that system would have the desired results in a world where most people have already voted to hang themselves.
    • 7bit 3 hours ago
      This food is rotten. Do better.
    • zen928 5 hours ago
      Intentionally misinformed citizens continued to charge the streets demanding "essential services" like barber shops need to be reopened and to intentionally dismantle and resist against all government protections on public safety during the pandemic (like wearing a mask during an active spreading event), literally while their grandparents and relatives slowly and painfully died on respirators in hospitals largely agreeing with the same notion of covid prevention measures being "pointless". They then attacked the institutions that provided either medical treatments or provided assistance, and continue to promote that culture. Lemmings to a cause they dont understand for a message they know is false.

      That is to say, there's always someone ready to make zealots die for a cause. IMO, that change would only shift in favor of the most radical extremists who see human life as expendable rather than cause anyone in power to think twice about pushing their ideologies onto masses.

      • fylo 2 hours ago
        Masks and protocols around them were largely just theatre though. Only very expensive n95 or better type masks, which were properly fitted and handled would actually provide any sort of protection from covid. Even the eventual proponents of masks initially were against the idea as in many ways many of the responses to covid were directed politically, not practically.
        • Dylan16807 2 hours ago
          The proper masks are not expensive and an imperfect fit still helps a lot.
          • fylo 54 minutes ago
            The majority of people were not wearing the proper masks, nor were they mandated or even in great supply. As I said, it was theatre.
      • LtWorf 4 hours ago
        When governments push out clearly nonsensical regulations, like you must go to the office even if you can work from home, but you cannot go hiking, yes people do tend to get mad.
        • Dylan16807 2 hours ago
          I saw a couple unreasonable restrictions like that in some places. It's not what caused the vast majority of complaints.
  • flumpcakes 5 hours ago
    And hopefully this gets voted down like all the other laws. Even if it passes, it will probably be repealed or just not enforced within some member nations.

    At least this is talked about and discussed... unlike in China, or Russia, or the US's own 20+-years-and-still-going-patriot act.

    • ibejoeb 5 hours ago
      A reasonable point about the discussion, but I doubt it is a meaningful one. The intention of these international agreements is that they circumvent the laws by moving data out of jurisdiction and have someone else do the surveillance, right? I have to assume that the EU is doing metadata analysis. All the talking is just about bringing it in house.

      On another topic, I don't know how mullvad intends to avoid compliance.

      "If VPNs are included, and if Going Dark becomes law, we will never spy on our customers no matter what."

      Saying "we can't give you logs because we don't have them" just means that they need to start logging or gtfo of the EU.

      • flumpcakes 5 hours ago
        They'll probably take it to court in the regions within the EU where this would be illegal, for example Germany. This is kind of what I meant by this law would be ignored/repealed as it goes against member nations own laws. I would expect there would be a lot of civic push back too. This law hasn't passed before, I'm not confident it will pass this time either. The real issue here is that the EU is not good at handling band faith actors - the same law in different wrapping should not be allowed to persist.
  • braiamp 2 hours ago
    The way to stop it is to introduce a law that does exactly the opposite: that encrypted communication is always protected and should always be protected and that no legislation shall be introduced that weakens these technical guarantees.

    That way, it essentially has to do a two step solution, of repealing the previous law that prohibits it, and then introducing their own.

    • userbinator 1 hour ago
      Unfortunately the EU has no 2nd Amendment, or they could go the route of classifying encryption as a munition.
  • shevy-java 34 minutes ago
    These lobbyists will never give up. This is one reason why the EU in its current form simply does not work.
  • gorgoiler 6 hours ago
    I love The Internet, it came into my life as I became an adult, I’ve watched it change the world, and I find attempts to lock it down to be abhorrent.

    I also grew up in a world where intelligence fieldcraft was an in-person activity where it was just about possible for one side to keep track of the other side, or at least hold some kind of leverage, counter-leverage, and counter-counter-leverage to stop the Cold War getting out of control.

    The internet, as well as giving us all this freedom to communicate, also gave the Controls of this world — high level intelligence officers based in their home countries but directing operations overseas — a wonderful new lever to influence, harass, and sabotage. Why burn an agent when you can find a useful idiot in a foreign country to agitate on your behalf?

    I sympathize with nation states’ urge to be able to see what’s going on online, but I hate the way they’re going about it. How do we balance a free Internet against a need to crack down on foreign influence?

    • Xelbair 5 hours ago
      >I sympathize with nation states’ urge to be able to see what’s going on online, but I hate the way they’re going about it. How do we balance a free Internet against a need to crack down on foreign influence?

      and more importantly - whose influence? how do we pick whom do we ally ourselves with and who we go against? How do we prevent such system from being abused to just entrench current powers that be, and stifle genuine opposition?

      If it is done behind closed doors, there's not much difference in EU becoming like Russia or China, with a coat of liberal paint instead.

      • gorgoiler 5 hours ago
        Security services qualitatively have as many fuckups to their name as they do successes. I was listening to a podcast last week about British undercover police fathering children with the women they were undercover with. If the position of the anti-Chat-Control people is that we should reject not just the backdoors but also — on the basis that they just can’t be trusted — the whole idea of a national, secret security service, then they should be open and say so.
  • SV_BubbleTime 7 hours ago
    VPN is a trust exercise, but, I’m sure if Mullvlad isn’t the best out there, they’re far from the worst.
    • charcircuit 7 hours ago
      They are not the best because they no longer support port forwarding. Their IPs are low quality and get you flagged as suspicious.
      • newdee 7 hours ago
        Which VPN provider doesn’t have their addresses flagged? I know a few offer “residential” IP addresses (for quite the premium), but as I understand it, these are a bit of a grey area and are also usually shared, so usually just a matter of time until they’re banned or flagged as proxy/shared/anonymiser.
        • charcircuit 5 hours ago
          The financial incentives for VPNs as they get bigger cause them to both put as many subscribers on the same IP as possible and to share IPs over the entire subscriber base. It's possible for a VPN to sacrifice profit to avoid being detected as easily.
          • HNisCIS 2 hours ago
            Tbh between that and cgnat I'm kinda hoping that the entire ipv4 space gets sufficiently tainted that sites stop blocking by ip
      • dr00tb 7 hours ago
        Can recommend https://njal.la if you still need port forwarding.
        • bossyTeacher 7 hours ago
          how does it compare to mullvad?
          • KomoD 5 hours ago
            One reason not to choose Njalla is that they changed their legal entity without (to my knowledge) telling anyone. THat's a bit of a red flag for me.

            They were incorporated as 1337 Services LLC in Nevis (the Caribbean island) and recently it suddenly changed to Njalla SRL in Costa Rica. Looks like some guy wrote a post about it where he contacted them, they said "internal restructuring, nothing to worry about" and refused to elaborate further.

            I know Peter Sunde (of TPB fame) founded it but I don't know if it has changed hands now.

      • edm0nd 6 hours ago
        They had to disable port forwarding due to abuse and spam iirc.
      • friend-monoid 7 hours ago
        Are you expecting a public IPv4 from a VPN?
        • Dylan16807 2 hours ago
          Not a whole public IPv4, just one port on it (or a couple). And the public IP should change every reconnect.
        • zrm 5 hours ago
          A VPN provider could easily support Port Control Protocol / NAT-PMP without giving each VPN client its own public IPv4.
        • aaomidi 7 hours ago
          Airvpn does it
          • pteraspidomorph 6 hours ago
            I'm happy Airvpn is rarely mentioned in mainstream vpn lists and don't typically mention them myself (sorry airvpn folks, but here's my apology) because I suspect its relative obscurity is in great part the reason it works so well. Not only reputation - it's technologically good too, supports all the payment methods, good prices, lots of exit points, no nonsense. I've been using them continuously for several years.
          • greatquux 6 hours ago
            Yep they are great! Wireguard support on Linux too
      • endgame 4 hours ago
        Which other VPN providers support the range of payment methods that Mullvad does?
      • dheera 4 hours ago
        Mullvad is one of the few that work in China today, any others? Or is it possible to run your own Mullvad server?

        Rolling your own L2TP/IPSec gets flagged by the China firewall these days

  • ekjhgkejhgk 7 hours ago
    Like, whos is pushing this shit? Who exactly is it that wants this? Which individuals?
  • moralestapia 5 hours ago
    So, they succeed and repeal it a third time. What can be done to stop them from trying again and again and again until they get away with it?
    • Sharlin 5 hours ago
      Not much really, unless the EU takes a big turn to the left. Which is unfortunately not something that's likely to happen anytime soon.
      • rjdj377dhabsn 4 hours ago
        The left? The authoritarian politicians pushing this legislation in the EU are more leftist than right.
        • LtWorf 3 hours ago
          They're usually liberals, so right wing but they don't specifically hate homosexuals.
    • Nasrudith 3 hours ago
      There would need to be some form of punishment towards them for their failure to deter them.

      The most 'accessible' options to a disgruntled populace (or a small portion of it, down to N=1) are generally recognized as extreme things that very few sane people are on board with, because they are recognized widely as bad precedents for societies. Things like issuing death threats, assassinations, or burning down parliament buildings. To state what I hope is already obvious - this is not an endorsement of violence. For one Japan's history of 'government by assassination' was incredibly ugly and helped lead to extremism which helped lead to Imperial Japan's conduct becoming notorious as they did.

      There are other far more peaceful options to be considered but they would require high degrees of coordination and agreement. For an example, the classic Amish shunning - if legislatures faced utter social ostracism for their attempts then they would be unlikely to attempt it again.

      I'm not sure what policies could even provoke such extreme responses as those listed (violent or otherwise) in the first place, but for better or worse Chat Control isn't one of them. My most realistic guess would be that trying to abolish the pension/retirement system altogether.

  • holoduke 7 hours ago
    I once liked the EU. Well still do it because of the east to travel without borders. But it's leadership is something dangerous and may shape to some form of dictatorship or entity that does not serve its people. But a small minority consisting out of some large companies.
    • hdgvhicv 6 hours ago
      The EU leadership is the leaders of the 27 sovereign countries

      Now you can argue there is a democratic deficit in those countries, sure.

      • Xelbair 6 hours ago
        There's democratic deficit in the whole system as this issue wasn't part of most internal election campaigns, effectively circumventing democratic process, due to lack of input from citizens themselves.

        EU severely lacks checks and balances if it tries to be something more than trade union.

        • vanviegen 2 hours ago
          Are you suggesting the existence democracies that only ever implement policies that were a significantly theme during elections?
    • izacus 6 hours ago
      This is a proposal from one wing of polititians that still hasn't even passed a basic voting process in EU parliament.

      So what exactly are you screeching about? Which nation on this world has leadership that never proposes anything like this? Which one is 100% pure and noone even thinks about bad things to bring up to a vote?

    • hkpack 7 hours ago
      I think EU will manage without you liking it. But painting its leadership as the one trying to shape dictatorship is incredible ignorant.

      Europe is preparing for the Russia invasion from one side, and betrayal by the US from the other.

      A country serving small minority of large companies is the best description of the US, not the EU.

      • h4xx0r1337 5 hours ago
        Wow. I cannot fathom anyone thinking this, but also I am doubtful the EU pays for propaganda on HN so it is what it is I guess. After von der Leyen's corruption and the fast pace into totalitarianism against the will of the population nonetheless. Just wow.
        • vanviegen 2 hours ago
          Are you really convinced that the EU, which is not even a nation and is usually laughed away for being incapable of making any firm decision whatsoever, is on a faster track towards totalitarianism than the US has been since its last election?
      • kace91 6 hours ago
        I'm as pro european as they come, but I think the author didn't deserve a downvote.

        If there is a moment when the EU could not afford to take hits to their popularity, it is now. And here we are, gifting free shots to anti-EU populists.

        • amarcheschi 6 hours ago
          Measures such going dark and similar ones are wholly supported - and pushed - by police forces around europe, not by politicians. I do agree that the politician should grow a spine and trust computer scientists for one, since they're the ones making laws after all
          • SiempreViernes 3 hours ago
            > I do agree that the politician should grow a spine and trust computer scientists for one

            Trust the computer scientists on how to prevent crime? Uh, well that's certainly creative.

            • amarcheschi 2 hours ago
              No, trust the computer scientists on what can easily be circumvented by criminals while still allowing third parties to scan private conversations. But I do suspect a bit that this is only an intended side effect
            • StrLght 2 hours ago
              As opposed to blindly trusting the police and LEA? Yes, absolutely — I'd rather trust computer scientists.
      • IlikeKitties 6 hours ago
        > Europe is preparing for the Russia invasion from one side, and betrayal by the US from the other.

        Let's assume for a moment that would be true. And let's also ignore the lack of a nuclear weapons in most EU countries.

        How does breaking encryption for normal people help? Spies and Operatives will just use PGP and ignore these laws, because that's what spies do.

        • true_religion 6 hours ago
          Mind you I don’t believe this, but the logic is if encryption is banned, then anyone using it will be easier to find like spies.

          Before online encryption, spies still used code books but having one in your house was essentially proof you were a spy.

          • hdgvhicv 6 hours ago
            Didn’t spies just use common books like war and peace or the bible
      • hexbin010 6 hours ago
        > Europe is preparing for the Russia invasion from one side, and betrayal by the US from the other.

        Are you attempting to justify ChatControl with that situation? You might need to help us out with how you arrived at that exactly

    • lawn 6 hours ago
      Your description match the US as well.
  • IlikeKitties 7 hours ago
    > The EU Commission and several member states are also looking for new rules on data retention. In a new ”Presidency outcome paper”, the member states discuss metadata retention: which websites you visit, and who is communicating with whom, when and how often. The ambition is “to have the broadest possible scope of application” and this time some member states also want the proposal to include VPN services.
  • in_a_society 5 hours ago
    GDPR for thee, but not for me.
    • vanviegen 2 hours ago
      GDPR (flawed as it may be) is there to protect consumers. So are you saying the ruling class is exempting itself from that protection?
  • kkfx 3 hours ago
    Well... Until people will react protecting their own interests we will only go in a death spiral.

    Only recently have we witnessed, particularly in the EU but also in the US and Canada, the blocking of personal bank accounts of individuals who were simply "inconvenient" to the ruling class, from Wikileaks to OnlyFans creators, Francesca Albanese, Frédéric Baldan, Jacques Baud, and various players in the crypto world, all without trial, without any crime committed, just unwelcome.

    This makes it clear that for Democracy to exist, a balance of power is needed, including internal balance, which requires that the population remains outside the potential control of the State to preserve a significant degree of freedom. Privacy is one of these fundamental freedoms, like freedom of speech, because the ideas circulating can be dangerous, but it is far more dangerous to have someone with the power to prevent ideas and news from circulating.

  • hdb385 7 hours ago
    [dead]
  • anura761 6 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • MangoCoffee 6 hours ago
    How long before the EU comes out with a social credit system like China?

    How long before the EU has its own version of China's Great Firewall?

    • jasonsb 5 hours ago
      Not long, but the muppets in this thread will downvote you to hell for even having the guts to express your opinion on this matter.
      • squigz 4 hours ago
        They're downvotes, not bullets. GP isn't brave for enduring them.
  • hkpack 6 hours ago
    To be honest, I think VPN businesses and specifically politically charged ones like Mullvad is doing disservice for the security of the country and specifically EU in this case.

    I think the right course of action should be a political activism, not a technological one. Especially when the company doing it makes a fortune.

    The course, when one can just disengage from participating in society by sidestepping the problems by either using VPNs in terms of censorship or by using Crypto in case of regulations is very dangerous and will reinforce the worst trends.

    Finally such person will still have to rely on the community around for physical protection to live.

    So instead of speaking from the high ground, please, tell us what your solution about mass disinformation happening from US social media megacorps, Russia mass disinformation, mass recruitment of people for sabotage on critical infrastructure.

    Tell us, how can we keep living in free society when this freedom is being used as a leverage by forces trying to destroy your union.

    I just want to remind you that dismantling EU is strategic goal of the US, Russia and China.

    Please, give us your political solutions to the modern problems instead of earning a fortune by a performance free speech activism.

    • StrLght 2 hours ago
      I am sorry, but I don't follow — are you saying that Chat Control is a solution to any of these problems?

      It achieves the opposite. Undermining encryption under the pretext of "think of the children" won't end well. It only creates more national security risks.

    • 63stack 5 hours ago
      >So instead of speaking from the high ground, please, tell us what your solution about mass disinformation happening from US social media megacorps, Russia mass disinformation, mass recruitment of people for sabotage on critical infrastructure.

      Why is the onus of explaining this on the people opposing it? Did any of the proposing politicians ever explain how their plan is going to solve any of these, rather than just being a massive power grab packaged up in "think about the children"? There are plenty of explanations on why this is not going to stop crime, why do you want more explanations and solutions from people telling you this is not going to work, rather than asking the people proposing "how is this going to work"?

    • amarcheschi 6 hours ago
      What? You don't need VPNs to do anything of that, we have political parties and journalists doing the job from within already
    • kfreds 2 hours ago
      Thank you for your constructive criticism.

      > I think the right course of action should be a political activism, not a technological one. Especially when the company doing it makes a fortune.

      We tried that. My cofounder and I, as well as several of our colleagues, tried classic political activism in the early 2000s. It became increasingly clear to us that there are many powerful politicians, bureaucrats and special interest groups that don't act in good faith. They lie, abuse their positions, misuse state funds and generally don't care what the population or civil society thinks. They have an agenda, and don't know the meaning of intellectual honesty.

      > The course, when one can just disengage from participating in society by sidestepping the problems by either using VPNs in terms of censorship .. is very dangerous and will reinforce the worst trends.

      It sounds like you're arguing for censored populations to respect local law, not circumvent censorship through technological means, and only work to remove censorship through political means.

      Generally, the more a state engages in online censorship the less it cares about what its population thinks. There are plenty of jurisdictions where political activism will get you jailed, or worse.

      Are you seriously suggesting that circumventing state censorship is immoral and wrong?

      > So instead of speaking from the high ground, please, tell us what your solution about mass disinformation happening from US social media megacorps, Russia mass disinformation, mass recruitment of people for sabotage on critical infrastructure.

      Social media companies make money by keeping people engaged, and it seems the most effective way of doing that is to feed people fear and rage bait. Yes, that's a problem. As is disinformation campaigns by authoritarian states.

      Powerful companies have powerful lobbyists, and systematically strive for regulatory capture. Authoritarian states who conduct disinformation campaigns against their population are unlikely to listen to reform proposals from their population.

      I don't claim to have a solution for these complex issues, but I'm pretty sure mass surveillance and censorship will make things worse.

      > Tell us, how can we keep living in free society when this freedom is being used as a leverage by forces trying to destroy your union.

      Political reform through civil discourse cannot be taken for granted. Mass surveillance and censorship violate the principle of proportionality, and do not belong in a free society.

      > Please, give us your political solutions to the modern problems instead of earning a fortune by a performance free speech activism.

      I'm not sure what you mean by performance. Please clarify.

    • IlikeKitties 6 hours ago
      > So instead of speaking from the high ground, please, tell us what your solution about mass disinformation happening from US social media megacorps, Russia mass disinformation, mass recruitment of people for sabotage on critical infrastructure.

      Education. Education. Education. The only thing that ever worked. is Education. Censorship and a total surveillance state aren't an option. Why bother protecting freedom and democracy if you have to destroy freedom and democracy to do so?

      And in case of sabotage of critical infrastructure, the answer is three-fold: 1. Apply the law to the saboteurs. 2. Retaliate in asymmetric fashion. We can't sabotage their hospitals but we can stop buying russian oil and gas, take their money and 3. arm ukraine.

      > Tell us, how can we keep living in free society when this freedom is being used as a leverage by forces trying to destroy your union.

      Are you or have you ever been a communist? We surveived the cold war and the warsaw pact. We can survive a third rate petrol station masquerading as a state.

      > Please, give us your political solutions to the modern problems instead of earning a fortune by a performance free speech activism.

      Who is earning a fortune here?

      • quantummagic 6 hours ago
        > Education. Education. Education.

        The problem is that many of the most highly educated people are the ones fully supporting censorship in the fight against disinformation. Higher education has become a bastion of illiberal ideology.

        • paulryanrogers 6 hours ago
          Just because some education implementations have problems doesn't mean education itself must be excluded from the solution.

          Public education and universities played a large role in freeing me from generations of magical thinking and religious indoctrination.

          • quotemstr 6 hours ago
            Universities may have cured us of some forms of indoctrination but exposed us to others: for example, nuclear power was demonized for decades is academia and our avoiding it has set us back as a civilization.

            The "answer" here isn't education per se. A would-be censor might look at the spread of an inconvenient idea and conclude the education isn't working and therefore harder measures are justified.

            The answer is epistemic humility and historical literacy. A good education instills both. They teach us that one can be wrong without shame, that testing ideas makes us stronger, and that no good has come out of boost ideas beyond what their merits can support.

            Specifically, I want universities to do a much better job of teaching people to argue a perspective with which they disagree. A well-educated person can hold the best version of his opponent's idea in mind and argue it persuasively enough that his opponent agrees that he's been fairly heard. If people can't do that at scale, they're tempted to reach for censorship instead of truth seeking.

            Another thing I want from universities (and all schools) is for them to inculcate the idea that the popularity of an idea has nothing to do with its merits. The irrational primate brain up-weights ideas it sees more often. The censor (if we're steelmanning) believes that coordinated influence campaigns can hijack the popularity heuristic and make people believe things they wouldn't if those ideas diffused organically through the information ecosystem.

            This idea is internally consistent, sure, but 1) the censorship "cure" is always worse than the disease, and 2) we can invest in bolstering epistemics instead of in beefing up censorship.

            We are rational primates. We can override popularity heuristics. Doing so is a skill we must be taught, however, and one of the highest ROI things we can do in education right now is teach it.

        • moomoo11 6 hours ago
          I think it’s because once you educate yourself, you see how the masses behave and it’s like the ultimate revelation.

          They are consumers. Feeders. They want to be told what to think.

          Most people don’t even have an internal monologue and many people say they don’t even think much, not even a thought.

          You thought for yourself. You used your brain. But you are outnumbered. Vastly.

          • pxc 5 hours ago
            > Most people don’t even have an internal monologue

            Is there any scientific indication that whether private thoughts are automatically verbalized actually has an impact on cognitive activity or function?

            Also where do you get this idea that most people lack an internal monologue? Afaik research indicates that totally lacking verbal thinking is very rare.

            • moomoo11 5 hours ago
              There is a person thinking about how to solve actual problems at the bus/rail stop. The other person is totally reactive (someone FaceTimes them), mostly glued to doomscrolling (consuming non stop). There are disproportionately more of the latter than the former.

              There’s nothing wrong with that it’s just how humans are wired. It’s pretty obvious.

      • dryarzeg 4 hours ago
        [dead]
    • quotemstr 6 hours ago
      In the history of humanity, it's never been the side attempting to restrict expression and the flow of information that's been in the right.

      You don't "solve" the spread of "disinformation" because it's not a real problem in the first place. What you call "disinformation" is merely an idea with which you disagree. It doesn't matter whether any idea comes from the west, from China, from Russia, or Satan's rectum: it stands on its own and competes on its merits with other ideas in the mind of the public.

      An idea so weak that it can survive only by murdering alternative ideas in the cradle is too fragile to deserve existing at all.

      When you block the expression of disagreement, you wreck the sense-making apparatus that a civilization uses to solve problems and navigate history. You cripple its ability to find effective solutions for real but inconvenient problems. That, not people seeing the wrong words, is the real threat to public safety.

      As we've learned painfully over the past decade, it is impossible for a censor to distinguish falsehood from disagreement. Attempts to purify discourse always and everywhere lead to epistemic collapse and crises a legitimacy. The concept is flawed and any policy intended to "combat the spread of disinformation" is evil.