Cyber Intelligence

Linkedin
  • News
    • Aerospace
    • Apple
    • Arrest
    • Automotive
    • Big Tech
    • Breaking News
    • Business Email Compromise
    • China
    • Chip Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Cyber Budget
    • Cyber Espionage
    • Cyber M&A
    • cybercrime
    • Data Leak
    • deepfake
    • Energy Sector
    • Ethiopia
    • Finance
    • France
    • Geopolitics
    • Government
    • Hacktivism
    • Healthcare
    • Human Error
    • Investment Scam
    • Iran
    • Israel Conflict
    • Malicious Bots
    • Malware
    • North Korea
    • Norton
    • One Minute Roundup
    • ransomware
    • SEC
    • SMB
    • Social Media
    • Sri Lanka
    • Taiwan
    • VPN
    • Wire Fraud
    • Workforce Cyber
  • Analysis
  • Expert Opinions
  • Resources
    • Conferences
    • Glossary of terms
    • Awards
    • Ecosystem map
Reading: Brussels backs down on mass surveillance
Share
Cyber IntelligenceCyber Intelligence
Aa
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Expert Opinions
  • Resources
Search
  • News
    • Aerospace
    • Apple
    • Arrest
    • Automotive
    • Big Tech
    • Breaking News
    • Business Email Compromise
    • China
    • Chip Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Cyber Budget
    • Cyber Espionage
    • Cyber M&A
    • cybercrime
    • Data Leak
    • deepfake
    • Energy Sector
    • Ethiopia
    • Finance
    • France
    • Geopolitics
    • Government
    • Hacktivism
    • Healthcare
    • Human Error
    • Investment Scam
    • Iran
    • Israel Conflict
    • Malicious Bots
    • Malware
    • North Korea
    • Norton
    • One Minute Roundup
    • ransomware
    • SEC
    • SMB
    • Social Media
    • Sri Lanka
    • Taiwan
    • VPN
    • Wire Fraud
    • Workforce Cyber
  • Analysis
  • Expert Opinions
  • Resources
    • Conferences
    • Glossary of terms
    • Awards
    • Ecosystem map

Cyber Intelligence

Linkedin
  • News
    • Aerospace
    • Apple
    • Arrest
    • Automotive
    • Big Tech
    • Breaking News
    • Business Email Compromise
    • China
    • Chip Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Cyber Budget
    • Cyber Espionage
    • Cyber M&A
    • cybercrime
    • Data Leak
    • deepfake
    • Energy Sector
    • Ethiopia
    • Finance
    • France
    • Geopolitics
    • Government
    • Hacktivism
    • Healthcare
    • Human Error
    • Investment Scam
    • Iran
    • Israel Conflict
    • Malicious Bots
    • Malware
    • North Korea
    • Norton
    • One Minute Roundup
    • ransomware
    • SEC
    • SMB
    • Social Media
    • Sri Lanka
    • Taiwan
    • VPN
    • Wire Fraud
    • Workforce Cyber
  • Analysis
  • Expert Opinions
  • Resources
    • Conferences
    • Glossary of terms
    • Awards
    • Ecosystem map
Reading: Brussels backs down on mass surveillance
Share
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
SurveillanceNewsBreaking News

Brussels backs down on mass surveillance

Editorial Team
September 6, 2024 at 8:03 AM
By Editorial Team Editorial Team
Share
EU backs out of surveillance plan
SHARE

EU backs out of surveillance plan

Contents
Telegram chief still facing charges in ParisDisappearance of mystery blonde

The European Union (EU) Council has made a last-minute withdrawal of the EU’s highly controversial planned “Chat Control” legislation, which was due to vote yesterday. This would have effectively introduced mass digital surveillance by means of fully automated real-time monitoring of all messaging and chats.

The EU would appear to finally have heeded the harsh warnings that have been coming from the cybersecurity and communication sectors since the controversial ruling was first proposed in 2022. For the six months prior to Thursday’s decision, the EU Belgian Council presidency has been sitting on a deadlock between EU countries. Germany and Poland have heeded privacy experts’ warnings of a potential police state. But Ireland and Spain are pressing for draconian new online laws to fight a rise in online child sexual abuse material that has grown since the start of Europe’s widespread lockdowns two and a half years ago.

US-based geopolitical newspaper POLITICO obtained a copy of Belgium’s eventual proposal, which sounded an immediate warning bell in the tech sector. Under the plan, messaging apps would scan pictures and links when users uploaded them via their services. Users were to be informed of this in the terms and conditions that most would not bother to read. Users who refused to tick the terms and conditions box would be blocked from sending pictures and links. Those who did tick it would be effectively signing away any right to online digital privacy. Highly secure apps using end-to-end encryption like WhatsApp, Signal, and Messenger would also have had to respect these measures. The draft proposal, however, exempted “accounts used by the State for national security purposes.”

Earlier this summer, Meredith Whittaker, the president of encrypted messaging service Signal, told the EU: “End-to-end encryption is the technology we have to enable privacy in an age of unprecedented state and corporate surveillance. And the dangerous desire to undermine it never seems to die.”

Telegram chief still facing charges in Paris

While encrypting messaging apps such as WhatsApp and Telegram are used by cybercriminals and child pornographers, they are also used by pro-democracy movements fighting repressive regimes. Telegram, for example, has been used extensively in Ukraine to organize resistance ever since the start of the Russian invasion, doubtless angering Moscow. However, it is highly unlikely that the bureaucrats have simply given up on their strongly held belief that the state has the right to monitor and control all personal and business communication across Europe and beyond. A new proposal draft is doubtless being prepared.

Telegram CEO, owner, and founder Pavel Durov is, for example, still in Paris facing what many regard as trumped-up charges relating to the online distribution of child pornography and illegal drugs. The owner of social media platform X, formerly Twitter, Elon Musk, also CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, has publicly called on French President Emmanuel Macron to explain the circumstances surrounding Durov’s arrest, claiming that France is trying to suppress freedom of speech online by globally censoring views not approved by the European Union EU.

Disappearance of mystery blonde

Russian-born Durov’s surprise arrest as soon as he landed in Paris on August 23 has already sparked a number of conspiracy theories, pointing the finger at various heads of state. There is also speculation surrounding the latest twist in the Telegram tale.

When Durov was arrested on the steps of his Embraer Legacy 600 private jet, he was in the company of a blonde, green-eyed Russian bombshell, 24-year-old Yulia Vavilova. No one has since been able to locate the mysterious Vavilova, a Dubai-based crypto-coach from Moscow, and her family in Russia say they have also heard nothing from her since Durov’s arrest. This has led to speculation that Vavilova, who had previously been traveling with Durov, was planted by some security services to trick him into landing in Paris, where the French authorities could arrest him.

But the mystery still remains as to why Durov should have ordered his private jet to land in Paris when he is said to have know that EU was gunning for him and that charges against him relating to Telegram were already being prepared.

TAGGED: elon musk, cyber espionage, paris, telegram, european union, european union council, ukraine, digital surveillance, geopolitics, secure communications, brussels, signal, twitter, messenger, france, belgian council, x, meredith whittaker, Cybersecurity, whatsapp, yulia vavilova, russia
Share This Article
Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article us secret service hot on the trail of "stalin" Secret Service Hot on the Trail of Cybercriminal “Stalin”
Next Article germany warning of russian cyber attacks German Intelligence warns of Russian cyber-attacks
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Editor's Pick

You Might Also Like

SpywareNews

Spyware poses a growing threat

“Lurking in the murky depths of the global marketplace for offensive cyber capabilities sits a particularly dangerous capability—spyware,” warns the Atlantic Council, a Washington, DC-based organization that promotes transatlantic cooperation and global economic prosperity. The number of US-based entities investing in the spyware market is three times greater than in the next three-highest countries with the most investors, according to a report published by the Atlantic Council on September 10: Mythical Beasts: Diving into the depths of the global spyware market.

September 12, 2025
CybergangsNews

Teenage hackers take down JLR

Carmaker Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has shut down its systems after suffering a cyber-attack. The group claiming responsibility for the attack, The Com, also referred to as Scattered Spider, is a loosely affiliated online community of predominantly teenage English-speaking hackers based in the UK and the US.

September 5, 2025
Cyber EspionageGovernmentGeopoliticsNews

Over half of cyber-attacks are state-sponsored

Over half of cyber-attacks exploiting known vulnerabilities are the work of state-sponsored groups from abroad, mainly from China. According to cybersecurity company Recorded Future’s research arm, Insikt Group, 53 percent of observed exploitation activity in the first half of this year was driven by state-sponsored and suspected state-sponsored actors and conducted for espionage, surveillance, or other geopolitical objectives.

September 2, 2025
ChinaCyber EspionageSurveillanceSpywareNews

China is now spying on you

The Chinese government now has a vast storehouse of confidential information belonging to key industries and individuals in the US and UK and many other countries. According to an urgent joint cybersecurity advisory issued by the US National Security Agency (NSA) and other U.S. and foreign organizations, threat actors sponsored by the Chinese government, notably Salt Typhoon, have been consistently targeting telecommunications, government, transportation, lodging, and military infrastructure networks globally.

August 29, 2025

Cyber Intelligence

We provide in-depth analysis, breaking news, and interviews with some of the leading minds in cybersecurity and distill critical insights that matter to our readers. Daily.

Linkedin

Category

  • Cybercrime
  • News

Quick Links

  • News
    • Aerospace
    • Apple
    • Arrest
    • Automotive
    • Big Tech
    • Breaking News
    • Business Email Compromise
    • China
    • Chip Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Cyber Budget
    • Cyber Espionage
    • Cyber M&A
    • cybercrime
    • Data Leak
    • deepfake
    • Energy Sector
    • Ethiopia
    • Finance
    • France
    • Geopolitics
    • Government
    • Hacktivism
    • Healthcare
    • Human Error
    • Investment Scam
    • Iran
    • Israel Conflict
    • Malicious Bots
    • Malware
    • North Korea
    • Norton
    • One Minute Roundup
    • ransomware
    • SEC
    • SMB
    • Social Media
    • Sri Lanka
    • Taiwan
    • VPN
    • Wire Fraud
    • Workforce Cyber
  • Analysis
  • Expert Opinions
  • Resources
    • Conferences
    • Glossary of terms
    • Awards
    • Ecosystem map

© 2023 Cyberintel.media

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?