Moritz Körner, Member of the European Parliament, disclosed the decision on Twitter. Swedish publisher SVG said, “The question was removed at the last moment from Thursday’s ambassadorial meeting in Brussels”.

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94 points

Wasn’t this rejected once already? Perhaps if they wanted to do something useful, they should pass something that says that if something is majority disliked twice or something, then it should be withdrawn and not proposed again for at least 100 years.

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7 points
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Either way they can just give it a new name and change some details to propose it again. Like how they made it “voluntary” this time (but you can only send text if you don’t agree).

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96 points

They will keep trying again and again and again. The assault on privacy has been going on for decades and it will never stop.

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17 points

And “Chat Control” isn’t even the only thing like this in the pipeline. There’s the so-called “security by design” bullshit (which does the opposite of what then name implies) that’s actually even worse than Chat Control and has also been worked on in secret, and which’d include mass scale surveillance of not just photos but pretty much everything, and is much more likely to pass than Chat Control.

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2 points

2001 especially.

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73 points

You’ve gotta defend for an infinite amount of time, but they’ve only gotta succeed once.

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37 points

Yep, and as I pointed out in another comment in this thread, Chat Control isn’t the only piece of legislation like this that’s in the works.

Considering that the extreme right just won big, I have no doubt that one of these fascist surveillance packages will go through. Yeah, at first it may be used for catching criminals, until it isn’t

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5 points

Yes. Technically, a similar vote could repeal the law just as easily but there is a history of governments not giving their power away easily; implementing it also sets a precedent and creates technical enforcement options for other governments willing to go through with something similar in the future, or for hackers to exploit because gov-rooted devices will remain in operation for years after the potential repeal.

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5 points
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Better define some basic human rights as a core tenet and fire repeat offenders, because they are a danger to the population.

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18 points

Such a rule is basically un-enforceable. Because it is nearly never exactly the same text. So it is always the first time voted on.

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10 points
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What they could do is create a law that protects the integrity of E2EE. At least in this case.

But I guess that will never happen… Well, a girl can dream.

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9 points

It was protected by the ECHR in a recent ruling. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/03/european-court-human-rights-confirms-undermining-encryption-violates-fundamental

However, Chat Control 2.0 argues that since the spying is done before the content is encrypted, it’s somehow ok. 🙄

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1 point

Or law that forbids any mass surveilance. By any entity.

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