Thanks again Michaël for writing this. I fully agree that this legislation is 
misguided, counter-productive and actively harmful, even just on technical 
grounds.  I support referencing the post already published over at Process One.

Gonzalo, I think the blog post should not copy the text wholesale, but instead 
reference it by link and provide context from the perspective of a standards 
organization like ours.

Cheers, 

ralphm


On 23 September 2025 15:59:20 CEST, Gonzalo Raul Nemmi <[email protected]> 
wrote:
>
>Dear Mickaël and Emus:
>
>As the author of the referenced PR, I think it goes without saying that I agree
>with Mickaël's argument, even if personally and as a lawyer I may have a more
>pessimistic and darker view about the most likely outcome of a piece of
>legislation of this nature.
>
>As I have come to learn way back at the university and over my 20+ years of
>experience as a lawyer, nothing good ever came out from the truncation of civil
>liberties nor, like in this case, basic Human Rights like privacy (Universal
>Declaration of Human Rights, article 12) or free speech ( see the Preamble of
>the same document ), with complete disregard of how good the arguments used as 
>a
>cause may have been.
>
>It is my understanding that, shall the 'Chat Control' proposal come to pass, it
>will have a direct and undeniable impact on the XSF and its main product: the
>XMPP protocol ... and the whole ecosystem it sustains.
>
>With the impending voting so close on the horizon ( October 14th ), it
>is my most humble opinion that this matter should be treated as soon as
>possible by the relevant persons and with the due diligence it deserves.
>
>El Mon, 22 Sep 2025 21:41:21 +0200 "E.M." <[email protected]> escribió:
>> Dear Mickaël,
>> 
>> many thanks for reaching out and also many thanks for this article.
>> 
>> I second what you state and formulate in this text. There are very 
>> strong statements, especially the quotes below.
>> 
>> If the others agree, we could reference this in our blog. I believe this 
>> is important and we should even consider to forward this to relevant 
>> persons. One of our members already stepped ahead: 
>> https://github.com/xsf/xmpp.org/pull/1563
>> 
>> (Mickaël, I assume you are okay with this?)
>> 
>> Best regards,
>> Eddie
>> 
>> _________
>> * "The concern isn't about protecting illegal content, it's about 
>> protecting democratic discourse. Private conversations could become 
>> subject to monitoring based on shifting political definitions of harmful 
>> speech. What begins as child protection infrastructure could evolve into 
>> a tool for suppressing political opposition or monitoring dissenting 
>> opinions in private communications."
>
>And it will .. as studied in detail in Michel Foucault's "Discipline & Punish".
>
>> * "The programmed death of European alternatives. This regulation 
>> creates a structural disadvantage for European communication services 
>> trying to build alternatives to US tech giants."
>> 
>> * "The October 14th vote represents more than a policy choice about 
>> child protection. It's a decision about whether Europe will cripple its 
>> own communication infrastructure in pursuit of surveillance capabilities 
>> that won't work as promised."
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On 22/09/2025 15:45, Mickaël Rémond wrote:
>> > Hello,
>> > 
>> > I tried to make a technical argument here:
>> > https://www.process-one.net/blog/chat-control-2025/
>> > 
>> > Feel free to send me your feedback if you find any mistake or inaccuracy.
>> > 
>> > Thanks !
>> >   
>> 
>
>Thank you Mickaël for your article, and Emus for your prompt and diligent reply
>to Mickaël's call and my PR.
>
>Best regards
>Gonzalo

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