Fonte: lui, direttamente su Telegram, qui:
https://t.me/durov/342

Copio/Incollo, qui sotto.

Bye,
DV

-------------------------
❤️ Thanks everyone for your support and love!

Last month I got interviewed by police for 4 days after arriving in Paris. I 
was told I may be personally responsible for other people’s illegal use of 
Telegram, because the French authorities didn’t receive responses from Telegram.

This was surprising for several reasons: 

1. Telegram has an official representative in the EU that accepts and replies 
to EU requests. Its email address has been publicly available for anyone in the 
EU who googles “Telegram EU address for law enforcement”. 

2. The French authorities had numerous ways to reach me to request assistance. 
As a French citizen, I was a frequent guest at the French consulate in Dubai. A 
while ago, when asked, I personally helped them establish a hotline with 
Telegram to deal with the threat of terrorism in France.

3. If a country is unhappy with an internet service, the established practice 
is to start a legal action against the service itself. Using laws from the 
pre-smartphone era to charge a CEO with crimes committed by third parties on 
the platform he manages is a misguided approach. Building technology is hard 
enough as it is. No innovator will ever build new tools if they know they can 
be personally held responsible for potential abuse of those tools. 

Establishing the right balance between privacy and security is not easy. You 
have to reconcile privacy laws with law enforcement requirements, and local 
laws with EU laws. You have to take into account technological limitations. As 
a platform, you want your processes to be consistent globally, while also 
ensuring they are not abused in countries with weak rule of law. We’ve been 
committed to engaging with regulators to find the right balance. Yes, we stand 
by our principles: our experience is shaped by our mission to protect our users 
in authoritarian regimes. But we’ve always been open to dialogue.

Sometimes we can’t agree with a country’s regulator on the right balance 
between privacy and security. In those cases, we are ready to leave that 
country. We've done it many times. When Russia demanded we hand over 
“encryption keys” to enable surveillance, we refused — and Telegram got banned 
in Russia. When Iran demanded we block channels of peaceful protesters, we 
refused — and Telegram got banned in Iran. We are prepared to leave markets 
that aren’t compatible with our principles, because we are not doing this for 
money. We are driven by the intention to bring good and defend the basic rights 
of people, particularly in places where these rights are violated.

All of that does not mean Telegram is perfect. Even the fact that authorities 
could be confused by where to send requests is something that we should 
improve. But the claims in some media that Telegram is some sort of anarchic 
paradise are absolutely untrue. We take down millions of harmful posts and 
channels every day. We publish daily transparency reports (like this or this ). 
We have direct hotlines with NGOs to process urgent moderation requests faster.

However, we hear voices saying that it’s not enough. Telegram’s abrupt increase 
in user count to 950M caused growing pains that made it easier for criminals to 
abuse our platform. That’s why I made it my personal goal to ensure we 
significantly improve things in this regard. We’ve already started that process 
internally, and I will share more details on our progress with you very soon. 

I hope that the events of August will result in making Telegram — and the 
social networking industry as a whole — safer and stronger. Thanks again for 
your love and memes 🙏
================

-- 
Inviato dal mio dispositivo Android con K-9 Mail. Perdonate la brevità.

Reply via email to