(Cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/26559848/)

Some significant news for Telegram users!

See this article for some interesting backstory context on Pavel Durov and Telegram: https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/the-telegram-billionaire-and-his-dark-empire-a-f27cb79f-86ae-48de-bdbd-8df604d07cc8

Since the post article is in French, here’s an auto-translation:

Pavel Durov, the founder and CEO of the encrypted messaging service Telegram, was arrested around 8 p.m. on Saturday evening as he got off his private jet on the tarmac of Le Bourget airport. The 39-year-old Franco-Russian was accompanied by his bodyguard and a woman.

The arrest was carried out by the gendarmes of the GTA (Air Transport Gendarmerie). Registered in the RPF (wanted persons file), Pavel Durov came straight from Azerbaijan. He had over his head a French search warrant issued by the OFMIN of the National Directorate of the French Judicial Police, issued on the basis of a preliminary investigation.

Why was he under threat of a search warrant?

The Justice considers that the lack of moderation, cooperation with the police and the tools offered by Telegram (disposable number, cryptocurrencies, etc.) makes it complicit in drug trafficking, paedophile offences and fraud.

This search warrant ran if, and only if, Pavel Durov was on national territory. “He made a mistake tonight. We don’t know why… Was this flight just a step? In any case, he’s locked up!” a source close to the investigation told TF1/LCI. Since he knew he was persona non grata in France, Pavel Durov used to travel to the Emirates, the countries of the former USSR, South America… He travelled very little in Europe and avoided countries where Telegram is under surveillance.

And now?

Investigators from the ONAF (National Anti-Fraud Office attached to the Customs Directorate) notified him and placed him in police custody. He is expected to be presented to an investigating judge this Saturday evening before a possible indictment on Sunday for a multitude of offences: terrorism, drugs, complicity, fraud, money laundering, concealment, paedophile content…

“Pavel Durov will end up in pre-trial detention, that’s for sure,” comments an investigator to TF1/LCI. “On his platform, he allowed an incalculable number of misdemeanours and crimes to be committed for which he does nothing to moderate or cooperate,” said a source close to the case.

His pre-trial detention at the end of his indictment is indeed in no doubt. Pavel Durov, a billionaire, has substantial means to flee and his guarantees of representation will hardly convince the judges.

A net with international resonance

For the investigators, this international sweep has various objectives. First, it makes it possible to kick the anthill, impress and deter the perpetrators of crimes and offences who exchange, until now, freely on Telegram. Secondly, they aim to put pressure on European countries to step up joint work to make secure messaging on terrorist cases bend.

Indeed, Telegram is a hive of criminal content. At the moment, the platform is in the news with the illegal broadcasting of Ligue 1 matches. But on this encrypted messaging service, many accounts are used by organized crime. Beyond terrorism, the most dangerous pedophiles communicate on Telegram to exchange content. “It has become for years THE number 1 platform for organized crime,” comments an investigator.

  • ᗪᗩᗰᑎ@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    This is a actually pretty worrying

    Why?

    Telegram is not an encrypted platform, so they’re not going after him for providing end-to-end encrypted services. They’re going after him because they have full insight into what’s going on in their platform and not taking appropriate action and in some cases completely ignoring it. It’s pretty common that if you’re providing a public platform that you comply with authorities. Signal doesn’t have this problem, they have no insight into anything their user base is doing; you can’t be asked to enforce things you can’t see.

    • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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      3 months ago

      So you want so start seeing platforms practice mass censorship? That’s what’s going to happen as they aren’t going to take on risk.

      What’s worse is that spells the end of the fediverse and smaller hosted media. The admins who are bold enough to host a Lemmy or Mastodon instance are eventually going to get taken by authorities. It doesn’t matter what country they are in. Admins can’t moderate everything and there will always be content that is illegal somewhere.

      • ᗪᗩᗰᑎ@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        So you want so start seeing platforms practice mass censorship? That’s what’s going to happen as they aren’t going to take on risk.

        Platforms are already not taking a risk and practice mass censorship. This is why you have words like “unalive” and “grape” becoming part of the American lexicon. It’s not even nefarious. Advertisers don’t want their content near negative content so platforms (without being asked by their government) auto-enforce these kind of policies.

        What’s worse is that spells the end of the fediverse and smaller hosted media.

        Serious doubt. All the fediverse has to do is comply with the law when asked, it really is that simple. Telegram was specifically not complying with the law, which is why illegal content is so easy to find on there, and thus why they were being targeted.

        Admins can’t moderate everything and there will always be content that is illegal somewhere.

        Frankly, if you can’t keep your house in order, you’re not taking your responsibility seriously enough. Nobody’s forcing lemmy, mastodon, peertube, pixelfed, etc admins to give free accounts to more people than they can manage.

        • bitfucker@programming.dev
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          3 months ago

          The law will then say E2EE is forbidden. And then the next step is making Telegram as a prime example to strip out E2EE because “Look how many bad guys we can catch without E2EE”.

          • ᗪᗩᗰᑎ@lemmy.ml
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            3 months ago

            The law will then say E2EE is forbidden.

            They’ve already been trying to add backdoors to encrypted platforms already.

            next step is making Telegram as a prime example to strip out E2EE because “Look how many bad guys we can catch without E2EE”.

            It’s going to be hard to ban E2EE globally. If they do propose laws to ban encryption we’ll just need to fight back. The issue with Telegram is completely unrelated to E2EE as they’ve implemented it so poorly, I wouldn’t conflate the two issues.

      • Daxtron2@startrek.website
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        3 months ago

        Telegram never was and never will be a secure messaging platform. Anyone using it as a such is an idiot.

    • NecroParagon@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      I and many tens of thousands of others use it for accurate and timely war updates. Where are we expected to go if Telegram starts censoring everything?

      This could be catastrophic for the war effort online.

      Edit: I should note that with the exception of illegal things, like child pornography, being made aware of to the owner of the platform they should have to act on that. That’s excluded from the ramifications this will have on important matters. Any platform should be made to act IF they are made aware of such activities.

      • ᗪᗩᗰᑎ@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        Thanks for the reply. Yeah, losing Telegram as a platform for updates would be pretty unfortunate. Is there something unique about Telegram that prevents alternatives from being used? Is it the group size? Its ubiquity?