codeptualize
6 hours ago
One interesting line in the proposal:
> Detection will not apply to accounts used by the State for national security purposes, maintaining law and order or military purposes;
If it's all very safe and accurate, why is this exception necessary? Doesn't this say either that it's not secure, or that there is a likely hood that there will be false positives that will be reviewed?
If they have it all figured out, this exception should not be necessary. The reality is that it isn't secure as they are creating backdoors in the encryption, and they will flag many communications incorrectly. That means a lot of legal private communications will leak, and/or will be reviewed by the EU that they have absolutely no business looking into.
It's ridiculous that they keep trying this absolutely ridiculous plan over and over again.
I also wonder about the business implications. I don't think we can pass compliance if we communicate over channels that are not encrypted. We might not be able to do business internationally anymore as our communications will be scanned and reviewed by the EU.
Bairfhionn
6 hours ago
The exclusion includes politicians because there would suddenly be a paper trail. Especially in the EU there were lots of suddenly lost messages.
Security is just the scapegoat excuse.
munksbeer
5 hours ago
> It's ridiculous that they keep trying this absolutely ridiculous plan over and over again.
There is a certain group of politicians who are pushing for this very hard. In this case, the main thrust seems to be coming from Denmark, but from what I understand there are groups (eg. europol) pushing this from behind the scenes. They need the politicians to get it done.
codeptualize
5 hours ago
Maybe we should scan their communications for corruption and undue influence. I'm sure it's all above board, so it should be fine if we get an independent group to review them right? (Just following to their reasoning..)
graemep
3 hours ago
I think that one problem is that politicians defer too much to "experts" in decisions like this.
I cannot remember who it was, but one British prime minister, when told by intelligence services that they needed greater surveillance powers, told them essentially, that of course they would claim that, and firmly refused.
Politicians now mostly lack the backbone. That does not stop them ignoring expert advice when it is politically inconvenient, of course.
psychoslave
2 hours ago
The problem is not they ask experts. Politicians are so utterly incompetent on the thing they are putting law on, at the level they will believe openoffice is a firewall[1]. That doesn’t mean all of them are that blatantly unaware of the basics for which they are supposed to decide of some rule, but that is definitely a thing.
The next thing is, do they know how to rely efficiently on a diverse panel of expert, or do they take only yes-man/lobby-funded experts around them?
On a deeper level, are they accountable of the consequences of their actions when they enforce laws which any mildly skilled person in the field could tell will have disastrous side effects and not any meaningful effect on the (supposedly) intended goal?
What we need is direct democracy, where every apt citizen have a duty to actively engage in the rules applied without caste exception.
Let’s protect children, yes. What about making sure not any stay without a shelve to pass the winter[2]? Destroying the right of private conversation except for the caste which decide to impose that for everyone else is the very exact move to offering children a brighter future.
[1] https://framablog.org/2009/04/02/hadopi-albanel-pare-feu-ope... [2] https://www.nouvelobs.com/societe/20240919.OBS93798/en-europ...
graemep
41 minutes ago
> The next thing is, do they know how to rely efficiently on a diverse panel of expert, or do they take only yes-man/lobby-funded experts around them?
Unfortunately, I know the answer to that!
> The problem is not they ask experts
I think with with IT they do realise that they do not know. They also believe someone who says something is feasible, or a good solution over someone who says it is not.
ulrikrasmussen
3 hours ago
Our current minister of justice in Denmark, Peter Hummelgaard, says "yes" to everything proposed by the police and intelligence agencies. Meanwhile, he has demonstrated no ability whatsoever of understanding the technical challenges of implementing something like this, and he firmly insists on the false claim that it is possible to let the police read encrypted communication without compromising the security model. He also directly spreads misinformation and downplays the significance of this by falsely claiming that Meta and others already scan E2EE chats to show us advertisements. He has said that he wants a crime-free society, and I don't doubt that that is his goal. I just also think he is too stupid to understand that a crime-free society has never existed, and if it is attainable, then it is probably not a very free society.
All in all, he seems to be a scared, stupid sock-puppet of Europol.
johnisgood
2 hours ago
And I doubt you achieve it by taking away people's privacy. There are bigger issues that need to be addressed and have nothing to do with E2EE. If they cannot address that, then ...? They just do not seem to care about what they are claiming to care about.
ThrowawayTestr
5 hours ago
Trolltrace is becoming real
erlend_sh
6 hours ago
That one line on its own should be enough put the illegitimacy of this proposal on clear display. Privacy for me (the surveillance state) but not for thee (the populace).
topranks
3 hours ago
If you read it closely they are not mandating backdoors in encryption.
WhatsApp could still have messages end-to-end encrypted. What they would be mandated to do is for the app to send copies of the messages to WhatsApp for their staff to review the contents.
This obviously breaks the point of end-to-end encryption. Without actually making it illegal for them to use encryption, or add any “backdoor” so it can be reversed.
It’s a weasely way of trying to have their cake and eat it.
hsbauauvhabzb
3 hours ago
So… a backdoor?
DaiPlusPlus
3 hours ago
Not a backdoor, but a built-in snitch.
WithinReason
3 hours ago
isn't that a backdoor?
mcv
2 hours ago
I think this is more the entire front of the house being open to the street.
baobun
2 hours ago
To me, a backdoor is passive. There for someone to enter. What's under discussion here is sonething active, so in some sense worse.
rightbyte
2 hours ago
Backdoor kinda implies it is not used very much or it would be a front door.
trilogic
4 minutes ago
But it is available for use. Corruption is not a fantasy but a reality. Usually who reach the top on political scale have seen it all, I mean all. Being polite to describe this reality use cases, (inside trading, political targeting, discrimination, monopoly etc). Who would know, who can stop it, who would dare!
What are the protection mechanisms? Are we suppose to hope that the untouchable/s is 100% honest?
It feels uncomfortable to say the least.
max_
32 minutes ago
> If it's all very safe and accurate, why is this exception necessary? Doesn't this say either that it's not secure, or that there is a likely hood that there will be false positives that will be reviewed?
Its all a scam! No one cares about you.
They are just setting up the new infrastructure to manipulate & control the docile donkeys more effectively (working class)
Unfortunately, they will be successful.
general1465
4 hours ago
It is pointless exception. If chat control will pass, everything is vulnerable by design. Or how do you distinguish if WhatsApp is installed on a phone of Joe Nobody or or a phone of a politician? You won't, unless you have some list, which can be leaked and from "do not touch credentials" will turn "target these credentials"
eagleal
3 hours ago
The exception means legally, that category of people, can't be prosecuted even if incriminating stuff were collected through such channels.
The next logical step, after a prosecutor or political push, would be for the Highest Order Courts of Member countries to invalidate evidence collected through such channels for those categories of people.
codeptualize
3 hours ago
Haha that’s a good point, I guess another sign that they really have no clue what they are doing
philwelch
2 hours ago
“False positives” is the most likely explanation. A common tactic for government agents is to pose as criminals and extremists, either to more effectively infiltrate existing criminal or extremist networks or to run sting/entrapment operations.
hopelite
4 hours ago
I think you may be looking at this wrong if you think it’s a ridiculous plan. It’s no more “ridiculous” than when anyone else is lying, deceiving, gaslighting, manipulating, and controlling and trying to hide and obscure that fact.
Pardon the comparison, but this mindset reminds me of a person that makes half hearted rationalizations and excuses for their abusive partner’s clearly hostile, vile, enemy actions when they are being cheated on. It’s just that the victims usually cannot see the trap they are in, especially not from within that trap that has been made to look very appealing for deceptive purposes in the first place.
Europeans in particular, especially anyone under 30 who does not even know anything other than a world of the EU and all the shiny EU PR/Propaganda that makes you not want to trust your lying eyes that they are constantly being groomed and love-bombed with, intentionally are deprived of the very tools necessary to recognize the danger of the situation they are in. Because after all, you have a common currency now and isn’t that great, right? And don’t you like traveling, you like traveling and taking drugs and having sex; you like the sex right? So pay no attention to the cost for the deal with that devil is losing self-determination and real freedom as people fall hard to the typical patterns of abuse and love-bombing. It’s affection and gifts today, abuse later when the trap has sprung!
And there’s no polite asking to be released from a tyrannical, abusive totalitarian system later when the trap has been sprung and your culture and people has been polluted and intentionally mixed up to destroy it. Or even now for that matter, as people like I am doing right now, who simply point out that the EU is an illegitimate abusive subversion of legitimate national statehood and ethnic self-determination and thereby an objective tyranny, are aggressed against hard and immediately.
The people of what would become the Soviet Union or even communist China also thought the wonderful bright eyed Bolshevik/Cultural Revolution communist revolution would solve all the problems with equality for all. Now the system does not even teach what a bait and switch hell and destroyer of cultures and people the Soviet Union and Mali’s China were anymore because those ideas and the people who hold them and perpetrated those evils upon humanity are now in control of the EU and are trying hard to get their vile hooks deeper into the USA too.
throw-the-towel
4 hours ago
As a Russian whose parents actually remember the USSR, I'm genuinely horrified by the Brezhnev vibes the EU's giving off.
jacquesm
2 hours ago
As someone who lived in a country under the russian boot at some point and who remembers the USSR from direct experience, you probably have a lot of stuff to study up on. But be careful on what internet connection you do it.
baobun
2 hours ago
You got me in the first half.
actionfromafar
3 hours ago
"intentionally mixed up to destroy it"
Can you expand on that.
p0w3n3d
6 hours ago
Oh Harry, don't worry! Everyone can happen to have bloated his aunt by an accident!
(quoting from memory), and also I like Ludo. He was the one who got us such good tickets for the Cup. I did him a bit of a favour: His brother, Otto, got into a spot of trouble — a lawnmower with unnatural powers — I smoothed the whole thing over."