The fight to protect end-to-end encryption is a never-ending one, and it’s seen some setbacks in recent months, most notably the passage in the U.K. of the Online Safety Act, which (theoretically, for now) empowers the government there to order communications providers like Signal or WhatsApp to bypass the strong encryption on their messages.

Well, here’s some good news for those who are keen on protecting their messages from prying eyes. The European Court of Human Rights said today that, while security services may want to decrypt some people’s communications to fight crime, weakening encryption for some people means weakening it for all—and that would violate human rights law (specifically, Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees the right to privacy).

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  • @punlex@lemy.lol
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    011 months ago

    These claims mislead users by making Telegram look like a champion of user privacy at its best

    • @Haven5341@feddit.deOP
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      11 months ago

      These claims mislead users by making Telegram look like a champion of user privacy at its best

      So what? This is not the topic of this thread. This thread is about a ECHR ruling / privacy and I would like to keep the discussion on topic. I do not care how evil Telegram is.

    • @geissi@feddit.de
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      411 months ago

      That is not what the article claims.
      At best it is your own personal perception of the topic.

    • @Microw@lemm.ee
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      311 months ago

      No, only users who have as bad of a reading comprehension as you would be misled