• gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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    56 minutes ago

    For years the plan was to make this scanning mandatory. In early November 2025, however, the Danish government amended the text: scanning is now “voluntary” for individual EU states to decide upon. That small word change was enough for the 27 EU countries to agree on November 26.

    If chat control would have been made mandatory, you can bet (and i’d be willing to bet a lot of money on it) that you’re going to have AfD in germany and FPÖ in austria (since they’re already pretty anti-EU) making a lot of noise about how evil the EU is for infringing on people’s privacy. (And they would be right about this, as much as i don’t like to agree with them.) This would give them more votes, than they already have.

    Making it voluntary is a clever trick of the EU to not make yourself extremely unpopular among the population. Well done, i’d say.

  • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 hours ago

    misleading headline, this isn’t a list of countries in which the law will (if it passes) be different (it won’t be, it’s an EU law, so will be the same in all EU countries), it’s a list of countries that currently support/oppose the law

    • unwarlikeExtortion@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      It isn’t misleading (that’d be a technically true headline, which this isn’t). This is a downright lie, or as some might say, “fake news”.

  • moretruth@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    Wow, this is bad. I thought this was over when Germany chose not to support it. Apparently not!

  • dave@feddit.uk
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    10 hours ago

    Countries which support the implementation of Chat Control:

    Spain, Romania, Portugal, Malta Lithuania, Hungary, Ireland, France, Denmark, Croatia, Cyprus, and Bulgaria.

    Countries that are undecided:

    Belgium, Greece, Italy, Latvia, Slovakia, and Sweden.

    Countries which oppose Chat Control:

    Slovenia, the Netherlands, Poland, Luxembourg, Germany, Estonia, Finland, the Czech Republic, and Austria

  • truthfultemporarily@feddit.org
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    9 hours ago

    I’m missing a bit the fact that this is not a law yet. This is the position of the commission, which the parliament will then need to approve and has to get past the ECHR as well most likely.

  • Armand1@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    It’s kind of unclear what “voluntary” means. Is it voluntary for countries to enforce? Is it voluntary for companies to scan chats?

  • DuskyRo@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Welp guys, looks like I’m moving to [insert country without that sh*t] (TBD). Or atleast my router is.

    • ඞmir@lemmy.ml
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      8 hours ago

      The implementation is client-side, so this wouldn’t work. It forces all apps to have a client-side backdoor.

    • dontblink@feddit.it
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      47 minutes ago

      Xmpp, IRC, Matrix, all great decentralized alternatives, but good luck convincing people in contacting you on Xmpp…

      This problem is a problem because it’s a social tendency, not because we don’t have alternatives… Very sadly…

    • bjrn@feddit.nl
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      6 hours ago

      Or Molly (alternative and more secure FOSS Android app for Signal), or Session or SimpleX.

      • Gutek8134@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        Write your own E2E encrypted peer-to-peer chat app (nobody has got time for that) or use some that doesn’t care about the law (pretty risky if it’s not open source, I doubt they’ll survive for long in the open), I guess

        • sleen@lemmy.zip
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          25 minutes ago

          We are essentially manipulated into the belief that centralised internet is good and all. This is a push driven by the governments where the whole infrastructure is redesigned into essentially a police state where the only thing left is fascism.

          Decentralisation must stay, and developments towards decentralisation must flow faster than ever. If the whole premise of the internet gets breached then it will be officially over, and we will all suffer in oppression.

        • JoeKrogan@lemmy.world
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          2 minutes ago

          I dont see fdroid blocking the app. I think signal is in the guardian project repos. Anyway a repo can just be hosted in switzerland or on tor or something. I would be more worried about govenments blocking access to the signal servers.

          Yet the pedo formally known as prince andrew is still walking free

          • obamakitten@lemmy.ml
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            2 hours ago

            Wow, you mean taking instant messenger suggestions from Republicans in the House of Representatives organizing gangbangs wasn’t a good idea?