Save our children!
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Aug. 30, 2024 (Update: Aug. 31, 2024)

"Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité" may be France's slogan harkening
back to the cries of the French Revolution, but France has always
maintained a rather authoritarian outlook on government. For
example, the French government has long wielded its authority to
regulate religious expressions in public, or even the language one
speaks. The idea of "liberty" in our Common Law tradition differs
substantially from the idea of "liberté" in the eyes of the
Napoleonic laws.

It is in this context that Pavel Durov, the founder and CEO of
Telegram, was recently arrested and charged with several alleged
crimes, despite the fact that Telegram is neither a French company
nor are its servers physically located on French territory -- the
only nexus being Durov, formerly a Russian citizen who fled Putin's
dictatorship, a French citizen.

The news of Durov's arrest immediately drew a broad international
condemnation, from both civil libertarians and also from the
far-right who benefit from Telegram's messaging services.

Among others, the French government accused Durov of "complicity"
in various crimes because Telegram ostensibly failed to moderate
and surveil its users' communications and offered end-to-end
encryption.

This is where all this becomes problematic. If Telegram is
criminal, so will be Signal, TeleGuard, or even WhatsApp. Durov's
conviction could set the stage for a war on encryption and privacy,
and companies will be forced to build backdoors or implement a
real-time (likely an AI-powered) censorship and surveillance system
-- a Chinese-style "cyber police" on steroids. As nation-states
around the world increasingly assert their extraterritorial
sovereign claims globally to cyberspace, countries ranging from the
United States to Russia to Communist China will demand to snoop on
everyone's private conversations. As security researchers agree,
backdoors are inherently unsafe and are an invitation to
exploitation by criminal actors as well as by authoritarian regimes
around the world.

This trend is not limited to France. The European Union and the
United Kingdom have recently enacted laws that purport to promote
"online safety" that lead to this sort of widespread surveillance
and undermining of encryption and security. Even some U.S.
politicians of both parties have called for something similar.

As I always say, "Save Our Children!" is the most potent
thought-terminating slogan used by power-hungry politicians to push
unpopular, unconstitutional, and despotic legislation. Never mind
they don't really care about children, they are just exploiting the
natural human tendency to protect kids but their end games have
little to do with that.

Even Albert Mohler, a Southern Baptist theologian and a known
"Christian nationalist," has expressed concerns about this case and
its long-term impact on freedom.

Speaking from a traditional Christian worldview, humankind inherits
a fallen nature and its moral corruption. When a group of powerful
but fallen and fallible humans form a government to rule over a
populace with the power of swords, then their sinful and corrupt
nature is magnified. Too often, the rulers and politicians try to
play God. They seek to surveil everything that exists, to regulate
everything that moves, and to tax everything of any value. Hence
the rise of Protestantism, joined by the tide of Enlightenment, led
a movement to restrain the government in Great Britain, North
America, and elsewhere -- hitherto absolute monarchies often backed
by the powerful Roman Catholic Church -- through constitutionalism,
separation of powers, and a recognition of inherent and inalienable
liberties given to individuals by God.

The French authorities' thirst for monitoring and censoring private
thoughts and conversations of the masses is precisely this kind of
"playing God" that must be stopped.

Their arguments and rationale for charging Durov with crimes are as
absurd as charging car manufacturers and gas station owners for
crimes committed by others using their motor vehicles; arresting
makers and sellers of paper envelopes because some scammers used
them to mail fraudulent letters or because some terrorists decided
to send ricin or anthrax by mail; or prosecuting home builders
because one of the houses they built became a drug den. Technology,
like any other product, is morally neutral unless it is
specifically invented to do evil things and nothing else (nuclear
weapons aren't morally neutral). Telegram, for one, has been used
by many freedom activists (as well as persecuted Christians) in
repressive countries to communicate and organize.

One of the problems we have today is that messaging apps such as
Telegram and Signal are still centralized walled gardens. If any
government decides that it ought to be shut down, then it becomes a
single point of failure. With Europe's Digital Services Act,
successful and popular services like WhatsApp are already
designated as "Very Large Online Platforms" (VLOP) and are subject
to increased scrutiny and regulation. And even on secure platforms
like Signal, users don't own encryption keys.

There is a need for building a truly decentralized system, in which
end users create, manage, and own their keypairs (like PGP and
OMEMO), and communications do not depend on any single server or
company (something like ZeroNet but more robust, reliable, and
user-friendly). So is a need for countries that stand up against
this global trend and position themselves as a cyber haven for
encryption, decentralization, zero-knowledge platforms, and
blockchain tech -- just like many small, resource-poor countries
have flourished as offshore banking havens.

In the coming days and years, Pavel Durov's name will be a cause
célèbre, just as were the names of Edward Snowden and Julian
Assange. In a classic cypherpunk manner, I hope he, too, will
ultimately prevail.

Edit (later on Aug. 30): Today, a Brazilian court issued an order
for ISPs in Brazil to block all access to the X social media
platform. The judge also included a stipulation threatening to
punish individual end-users with a fine of 50,000 reais per day if
they attempt to access X via VPN or any other means to circumvent
the block. This is a whole new level of escalation in
nation-states' war on an open, free, and borderless Internet. Not
only that governments of the world increasingly assert a universal
and extraterritorial jurisdiction over online platforms and
services outside their own countries, but they are also building a
sort of "cyber borders" -- something only a few despotic regimes
(think China, Iran, and North Korea) have done in the past.

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=>
https://www.readtangle.com/telegrams-founder-arrested-pavel-durov-france/
What other commentators are saying (Tangle News)
=> https://albertmohler.com/2024/08/29/briefing-8-29-24/ Albert
Mohler on Pavel Durov
=>
https://reuters.com/world/europe/lawyer-telegram-boss-durov-dismisses-allegations-absurd-french-media-reports-2024-08-29/
Lawyer: Durov allegations are absurd
=>
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/03/eff-tells-eu-commission-dont-break-encryption
EFF: Don't break encryption
=> https://stopscanningme.eu/en/how-CSAR-affects-us.html EDRi: How
do CSA regulations affect us all?
=>
https://crimethinc.com/2022/12/09/canary-in-the-coal-mine-twitter-and-the-end-of-social-media
The end of social media (CrimethInc)