olafurp,

I sent my friend “ax4uol4wj83birqti336mk92mu8” and that’s what he got

OhVenus_Baby,

Hahaha

emberpunk,

It is cute that they think they can regulate the use of math and how the internet can be used.

lol

foremanguy92_,

Right

Zerush,
@Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

The only is avoid centralized chats, using decentralized encrypted ones. For all those which use Watsfuck and others like these Google-Zuckerbot derivates it makes anyway no difference if the EU scan or not their chats, especially using stock iPhone or Android.

foremanguy92_,

That’s right but the EU wants to break the E2EE encryption for its power

Zerush,
@Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

Yeah, wait for it. Even in China they are not cappable to control all the privacy tricks and measures for messages by the users. Where there is a law, there is also a trick to go around it, I doubt very much that they manage to control more than the usual chat apps, the effort would be economically unaffordable to do it also in decentralized or even on self-hosted private networks.

smiletolerantly,

They don’t actually have to enforce that though. Rather, it’s a neat trick: if you do use encrypted chats, well, you’re purposefully doing something illegal! To hide information, no less! That surely means you have more to hide, and since you’ve already broken a law, let’s investigate further!

To be clear: I’m not saying this is the intended effect. But it is a frighteningly possible one. Anyone who has reason to hide their communication (regime critical activists, opposition politicians, investigative journalists,…) either have to

  • accept that their communication will be scanned, making it trivial to spy on them and use that information (legally, no less!) to hinder/stop them, or
  • do something illegal, giving pretext for hindering/stopping them since they’ve now committed a crime
foremanguy92_,

They don’t want to forbid the encryption only to backdoor to have a control on it. But that’s almost impossible to backdoor all of them…

Zerush,
@Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

the argument ?I’ve nothing to hide? isn’t valid. Ask the people if then it’s also OK if the Postman or anyone else read their private correspondence, or is looking over their shoulder while you are chatting with someone, above you are investigated by the authorities when you try to avoid it, it’s exactly the same

smiletolerantly,

Oh, absolutely. In case it wasn’t clear, I’m against chatcontrol.

foremanguy92_,

I know that the law is almost impossible to apply but first we have to stop it, if they gain the power of reading trough WhatsApp and else, they could ask for more after

Zerush,
@Zerush@lemmy.ml avatar

Asking and being capable to do it are two different things.

menas,

I read the text, and didn’t find anything on centralize or decentralize messenger. Are you talking about the technical solution they want to use ? The text is very confusing about it.

xilliah, (edited )

Lol Facebook was too dumb to even share my father’s posts when he joined. Just kept spamming me with rage bait and posts from someone obnoxious I met at a party years before and never really had a real contact with. How is this company supposed to detect anything? To me it’s just a cesspool that provides a few people with power.

Let’s imagine the error rate would be 0%, anonimity is a right and none of the privacy tools are broken, would you be on board with it? Or are there concerns I am missing here.

foremanguy92_,

That’s why the EU wants to control the chats. They would ask to software producers to backdoor their apps, and Meta Google and Microsoft would be OK with it.

xilliah,

You mean like a secret power motive? I’ve never sought that in the EU. Would appreciate any references.

foremanguy92_,

Read this how it affects you text : www.patrick-breyer.de/en/posts/chat-control/#how-

All of your chat conversations and emails will be automatically searched for suspicious content. Nothing remains confidential or secret. There is no requirement of a court order or an initial suspicion for searching your messages. It occurs always and automatically.

Intelligence services and hackers may be able to spy on your private chats and emails. The door will be open for anyone with the technical means to read your messages if secure encryption is removed in order to be able to screen messages.

xilliah, (edited )

Hmm I’m not under that impression, at least not from the parliament. I’m unfamiliar with the dynamic between the commission and the parliament but it might be that the commission tends to state what’s possible and the parliament then picks what they want.

It’s not a backdoor as far as I understand it and it doesn’t compromise e2ee, but a scan on a system you trust. Local or on a server you trust.

The only issue I personally have is with the error rate. It seems to be at 80%. Personally I would find any level of error a problem. I don’t see any reasonable solution with our current tech.

nickwitha_k,

By acting as a man-in-the-middle with the ability to read unencrypted message data (absolutely required in order to try to match against known CSAM), this is absolutely providing a backdoor as well as undermining privacy and security. By needing to trust another party, there is now a greater threat surface which is outside of end user control. One compromised account with access to that third-party is all it would take to extract private details from any messages, undetected, whether for sale on there blackmarket or for suppressing political dissidents, that’s exactly where this would go and we know this because state actors have been caught doing it and getting their toolkits leaked to criminals.

This kind of law doesn’t make children or regular people any safer.

xilliah,

I think we have different information. What I’ve read showed that the commission had a very broad and extreme proposal just as you just mentioned. I’d definitely not be on board with that.

However the parliament’s proposal was way more restrictive. If I understood it right it’s the commission that makes proposals but the parliament can react to it and this goes back and forth. The parliament is the one in the end that turns it into law.

I’m still a newbie in this area because I wasn’t able to vote due to my circumstances until last week.

As I mentioned before this might just be a standard day at the office for them. The commission makes wide and extreme proposals. Perhaps they even survey that stuff and look at the public opinion and allow time for debate. Eventually they create a reasonable law.

possiblylinux127,

If this ever makes it to the US I am going to put up a hell of a fight. On my left will be California and on my right Texas.

makeasnek, (edited )
@makeasnek@lemmy.ml avatar

We need more censorship-resistant, private, decentralized communication protocols. We need them to be widespread enough that lawmakers see censoring/controlling them as technically impossible and politically unwise. That means they need to be easy to use for the average person so we can get sufficient adoption. Donate to your software of choice, that’s how it happens.

This is kinda how Bitcoin is. Even if a nation-sate wants to “ban” it or attack the network, the network is gonna keep working and doing its thing (technically impossible) and they will piss off a bunch of voters and/or other keys to political power and potentially lose out on businesses and jobs building in this sector (politically unwise). The CCP tried to ban Bitcoin some years ago, did not work at all, and the network wasn’t nearly as strong or large as it is today.

possiblylinux127,

I would say matrix but that is unlikely. Simplex Chat and Signal it is.

foremanguy92_,

Matrix is in fact decentralized, SimpleX too. But Signal is centralized.

possiblylinux127,

I won’t disagree

Signal has downsides but it us still better than Whatsapp

foremanguy92_,

Almost everything is better than WhatsApp

HurlingDurling,
@HurlingDurling@lemmy.world avatar

And yet all of my friends and family refuse to leave whatsapp no matter what because everyone they talk to is also on whatsapp and they don’t want to deal with multiple apps.

🫤

foremanguy92_,

Try your best to switch apps, and maybe one day you will succeed

ItsComplicated,

Doesn’t scanning before upload imply the encryption is broken somewhere? Is that the point, to remove encryption? Forgive my naivete.

foremanguy92_,

For sure! The EU will tell to the apps to backdoored their encryption to accept this law. For example Google, Meta and Microsoft are okay with it if it is implemented. And Signal would leave the EU market.

onlinepersona,

With Christian democrats in the majority (preliminary results), it’s doubtful the saga is over.

Anti Commercial-AI license

foremanguy92_,

Right 😭

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

I thought the chat control law idea kinda died already

manucode,
@manucode@infosec.pub avatar

They will try to bring it back to life every few years or so

Daaric,

Never, they’ll try again and again with different names, covered by different purposes and stuck to another law.

noodlejetski,

nope, they’ll vote on it again in the few weeks. if it passes, e2ee messengers will be required to scan images on device before sending them. you will be able to not agree to that, but then you won’t be able to send or receive media and links, only text.

www.patrick-breyer.de/en/posts/chat-control/

foremanguy92_,

Here are the first vote results mepwatch.eu/9/vote.html?v=167712

doodledup,

Great, so I’m seing this right that everyone is voting Yes?

foremanguy92_,

That’s it, only the green party is “okay”

doodledup,

Why is this not headline number 1 in every newspaper? It can’t get any more dystopian than that. Why does nobody care, god damnit…

foremanguy92_,

You’re right this world is crazy, they should talk about the right things…

foremanguy92_,

Why it’s not number 1? Because people are using SMS, Messenger and Instagram chats…

chordsphere1,

Is it true it’s already implemented by google, meta…?

foremanguy92_,

No it’s not implemented but they would implemented this backdoor if the law pass

noodlejetski,
GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

But why can’t you just use software from GitHub or F-Droid or something that doesn’t have to obey these laws? Is it illegal?

noodlejetski,

good luck getting everyone you know to communicate with you with “software from GitHub or F-Droid or something”. I’m having a hard time making people try out Signal, which is freely available on the major app stores (and which, by the way, has declared that they’ll leave the EU market if one device scanning will be enforced on them).

chordsphere1,

I think this would give me a reason to tell my contacts why I refuse from now on to use whatsapp for instance. I could say something like whatsapp now scans every single photo you send, therefore I won’t use it so contact me on some other place.

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

Good luck with it, mister/miss

chordsphere1,

Thank you, good luck to you too

foremanguy92_, (edited )

That’s sad but try to “afraid” a bit that’s almost the only way to convinced non-privacy guy to switch…

chordsphere1,

Sorry, what does “unfraid” mean?

foremanguy92_,

Afraid sorry

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

I wasn’t even talking about such cases. I was talking about people who need really secure and private communication in that particular comment

foremanguy92_,

Signal is great but lack some points, like the requirement of the mobile number or the centralisation of the servers

noodlejetski,

okay, but that’s not relevant to what I’m talking about here.

foremanguy92_,

Right sorry

foremanguy92_,

In fact it would be illegal but you wouldn’t take risks by using them. But the authorities could make them shut down one by one

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

They can’t if you use a VPN and the app is not in their jurisdiction

foremanguy92_,

That would be difficult for sure but in fact it would be illegal

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

I don’t care if it’s illegal if the law violates people’s privacy tbh

foremanguy92_,

I understand totally but it is better to stop this law as soon as possible

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

Agreed

shortwavesurfer,

This person gets it. If something like this is made illegal, the best way to fight it is just to ignore them. After all, they can’t lock up everybody. Then they would have no subjects to enslave. I mean tax. I mean enslave.

foremanguy92_,

Right 👍

EngineerGaming,
@EngineerGaming@feddit.nl avatar

Even if this is illegal - how would such usage be detected? Your device just makes a request to a random domain on a random VPS, and the traffic is TLS-encrypted - would usage of XMPP/Matrix/whatever be that distinct?

foremanguy92_,

I totally understand and this approval is absolutely ridiculous just because it’s almost impossible apply this… But even with almost 0 chance applying to every apps it’s better to kill this law as soon as possible

eveninghere,

What does “scan” mean here?

noodlejetski,
eveninghere,

I read that and hoped further elaboration.

foremanguy92_,

In fact it would be “scanned” by AI for searching all the kinda sexual, abusive stuff… In fact to protect children

eveninghere,

But the link described it as if it’ll do database matching to find well-known images.

foremanguy92_,

That’s why it’s a scan, like done apple with their gallery. Scan signatures, AI recognition etc…

eveninghere,

No, what I’ve interpret from the webpage is far more basic. Just matching images, almost like pixel-by-pixel. If you think about it, legally describing your interpretation (Apple’s gallery) is very challenging and is thus possibly infeasible.

As a result, my feeling is that the EU is going with a far inferior method that doesn’t have to send images to the server. Technically speaking (they might still require that).

foremanguy92_,

They try every year…

Korkki,

political elites in Europe are afraid and fear upheavals are coming in the coming years and months because of the cost of living crisis and the war. They try to clamp down beforehand to preserve their own power. This always happens when things go bad. The leash is kept looser when people behave and it’s tightened again when the opposite happens. There is no real freedoms that is given to the people by the elites, because what concessions they give willingly they can just as easily take away when they no longer feel like it. Provided that they think they can get away with it.

GolfNovemberUniform,
@GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml avatar

This is why we shouldn’t let such people to the government in the first place. Anyone who believes in “patriotism” and “national interest” (that appears to be 99% of people in the democratic world) will disagree though. It’s a matter of double standards, lack of understanding and care at this point

foremanguy92_,

That’s right, first try to vote and be listen.

archchan,

It’s not just European elites who are afraid of upheaval. It’s all of them. It’s one of the reasons why they all have bunkers, why Zuckerberg is building another one in Hawaii recently. They know that we can actually do something about them because we outnumber them by a lot, so they build these systems of control. Governments, corps, elites have all become noticeably more brazen in the past several years.

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