Germany Raises Prospect of Shutting Telegram Over Hate Threats (bloomberg.com) 102
Germany raised the prospect of closing down the Telegram messaging service over concerns about its use as a platform for extremist groups. Bloomberg reports: The country could seek to block the service if the government reaches the conclusion that it breeches national and European Union law. "A shutdown would be very serious and clearly the last resort," Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said in an interview with German weekly Die Zeit. Before such a step, all other options would have to be exhausted, but "we can't exclude this per se," the SPD politician said. Talks about possible measures against Telegram are ongoing, an Interior Ministry spokesman said on Wednesday, adding that it wasn't clear what legal and technical procedures would be necessary to switch off Telegram.
Cute (Score:2)
Cute.
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They do.
Correct... Just pass the order on to the ISPs to do the dirty work, and voila.. blocked
leftist EU...
:-) very amusing
Re: Cute (Score:3)
You guys are funny. If Russia couldn't block Telegram, what makes you think Germany can? It was quite annoying when Russia was trying to block Telegram because there were periods they were blocking whole ranges of IPs assigned to AWS, which made things difficult for our development teams in Russia. Yet they still carried on using Telegram.
Then again, we don't know the details of the deal the Russian government and Telegram made that resulted in the ban being lifted. It's for this reason I prefer Signal.
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Russia has problems blocking things because of certain traditions that were seeded in their laws and constitution after the fall of Soviet Union. It's the same reason why their police have problems actually doing things needed to arrest people doing things like running around the city away from the police like ramming them, resulting in those hour long videos of police just chasing suspects around until they run out of fuel. Russians have certain legal rights against their government that Germans do not.
Fre
Re: Cute (Score:3)
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Youtube doesn't allow violent videos of the kind I'm describing, naive one. They result in removal of one's channel. It's how Navalny and his crew can't post their most interesting videos there any more and couldn't for a long time.
But you can find them on their telegram channels to this day.
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Not that I support this, but they can block Telegram quite effectively by simply making it illegal. Google and Apple will then remove it from the German app stores. I'm not sure if they are obliged to delete it from people's phones, but they could do.
Sure, if you want it you can just download a .apk and side-load it on Android. I don't think they are too worried about that, most people will just move on to something else. Apple users are SOL unless they root their phones.
Technology remains morally neutral? (Score:2)
But they aren't worried about "most people". At least not until the entire population has gone nuts or been intimidated into faking it. The Germans aren't trying to rewrite or whitewash history, so many of them still know how quiet most Germans became as things went downhill after 1933... There's also the Pascal effect. As things got worse, being silent in public became dangerous, but faking enthusiasm (for the Nazis) in public was psychologically damaging in itself. If you didn't prove you were a "friend",
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f Russia couldn't block Telegram, what makes you think Germany can?
Well maybe they can get some help from China, India, Pakistan, etc. Blockage is not difficult. And if/when they engage in deep packet inspection, all bets are off. Then all they have to do is whitelist the protocols allowed to pass through the pipe.
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They really think they have the power to control the internet.
It is not just the Internet. Germans also use phones to discuss bad things.
To be safe, they should also shut down the postal service.
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>It is not just the Internet. Germans also use phones to discuss bad things.
It's worse than that! People might even have bad thoughts in their heads. Can you believe it?
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People might even have bad thoughts in their heads.
We can't let that happen. These people should be shunned.
Re:Cute (Score:4, Insightful)
It is not just the Internet. Germans also use phones to discuss bad things.
People might even have bad thoughts in their heads.
We can't let that happen. These people should be shunned.
Or put in camps -- oh... wait.
Re: Cute (Score:2)
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We were all being sarcastic -- I hope.
(I know I was anyway.)
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Germany likes to pretend it doesn't still have a Nazi problem. But German Neo-Nazis [kpbs.org] are not in short supply. Nazi content and holocaust denial is illegal in Germany, which has only driven their Nazis underground and made them harder to track... and easier to ignore.
We have the same problem here in the USA, where white supremacists have managed to get many jobs in policing [rollingstone.com], so I'm not suggesting I'm feeling smug. Rather, I'm concerned.
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Germany likes to pretend it doesn't still have a Nazi problem. But German Neo-Nazis [kpbs.org] are not in short supply. Nazi content and holocaust denial is illegal in Germany, which has only driven their Nazis underground and made them harder to track... and easier to ignore.
We have the same problem here in the USA, where white supremacists have managed to get many jobs in policing [rollingstone.com], so I'm not suggesting I'm feeling smug. Rather, I'm concerned.
I'm not sure they're pretending as much as trying to avoid it.
Germany more than anyone understands the danger that Nazis and other extremists pose. Shutting down Telegram isn't Germany blindly repeating the mistakes of the past, it's Germany doing everything it can to never repeat the mistakes of the past.
I don't know if this is the right tactic, but I wager there's few countries who have thought as deeply about how to prevent right wing extremism as Germany.
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I don't know if this is the right tactic, but I wager there's few countries who have thought as deeply about how to prevent right wing extremism as Germany.
You can't fight it by driving it underground, which is what they've done. You want idiots to be idiots out in the open, so you know who the idiots are. Tightening their grasp only leads to the slime squirting out between their fingers.
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That is because we have a big beheading campaign coming.
At the moments we start with volunteers.
Then we start with kids, that helps saving costs in schooling etc.
Not sure what is first actually, kids or elderly, elderly would help in saving costs in healthcare etc.
Then we go for the unemployed.
Well, kind f sucks ti get unemployed if yu ware in kid or elderly care, I guess we give you a 3 days grace period to get a new job.
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That is because we have a big beheading campaign coming.
What?
Re: Cute (Score:2)
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So, how exactly is Telegram different from SMS, other than the encryption?
As far as I can find, it is an IM client, so much like Skype. You can communicate to groups or individuals. It isn't really Social Media in any way though, as what you post isn't really publicly accessible.
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And the "widely known" part is why shutting down telegram could actually make sense. Sure, there will be alternatives, but they won't be known to little criminals.
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Social distancing has a side benefit of preventing people from communicating face to face easily as well!
Quick make sure there is mandatory social distancing everywhere (even in your homes) - it will prevent communications in secret, since with social distancing everywhere, you can't whisper to each other!
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Social distancing has a side benefit of preventing people from communicating face to face easily as well!
This is a joke, but in Franco Spain, they forbade meetings of more than a few people for any purpose because they didn't want people conspiring.
After he died, they instituted democracy, and the mayor of Madrid encouraged everyone to go out and party as much as possible. He was a very popular mayor.
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They do. (Score:3)
They really think they have the power to control the internet.
Cute.
Oh but they do have that power, specifically when it comes to communication apps which are almost universally used on a phone, universally connected to an ISP, rarely used in conjunction with a VPN, and relies heavily on network effects.
That last part is critical. Your ability to use telegram via some workaround is irrelevant. If the person you want to talk to doesn't use it, you'll abandon it too.
Make no mistake, it is trivially easy to kill a messaging app in a country. It's probably the easiest thing on
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Looks at the down vote. Some must be offended.
Or some just recognize the post as complete bull. Perhaps both.
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Definitely both.
“left” vs. “right” are mostly U.S.A. inventions, a product of a two-party state anyway, and te few Europeans that do believe in it consider the entirety of U.S.A. politics quite “right”, and with that they mostly focus on fiscal matters and tax scales, not the strange microethnicity war that goes on there.
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What signs of "dictatorship"? For example, american n11ggerstan has had fraudulent votes by left libturds to "elect" a fake president Biden. Then they declared half the state domestic terrorists and prosecute with criminal charges. Anything like that?
When was the last time they let you out into the fresh air?
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Oh look, someone who knows jack all about history. The idea of a left and right political spectrum were French inventions. It comes from the first French General Assembly, in which the French politicos professing to believe in the Enlightenment were seated on the left, and the guys who were rightly extremely fucking suspicious of the bastards who would later go on to slaughter their political opponents before descending into a purity spiral and slaughtering themselves were seated on the right side of the ch
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Oh look, someone who knows jack all about history.
I like how you lead with this and then you follow up by reducing a very complex historical era into a very simple "good" vs. "bad" narrative. Some view history as a rhetorical practice of taking historical evidence and weaving it into useful narratives. Your post is a fantastic example of this.
I just wonder if you were intentionally making an argument in bad faith (while doing an excellent job of framing the argument as a mere historical fact), or if you are actually as simple as the historical narrative yo
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And what would that have to do with today? I know the origins because I finished secondary school, but that has absolutely nothing to do with how the terms are used today. The political issues that drove the French revolution have little relevance today, and it almost certainly does not have much relevance to how the terms are used today.
That assembly was indeed also in effect a two-party situation, but that's not the case with most modern European legislative which enjoy political uniformity due to proport
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most modern European legislative which enjoy political uniformity due to proportional elective systems
I believe you mean political pluriformity?
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"Left" vs "right" are definitely not an USA invention: the division originated during the French revolution when the National Assembly organically divided itself in having to the right the supporters of the king and to the left the supporters of the revolution. The current "left-right" spectrum of political positions derives form that and exists in basically all modern parliaments with a plurality of political positions, be it a multi-party system or a two-party system.
Also note that the USA are one of the
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Looks at the down vote. Some must be offended.
No, no one is offended. tsilvergun is just such a worthless troll who publishes nothing other than bullshit that all his posts start at -1.
And this post is fully on brand for him.
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ANTIFA is banned in Germany, and has been banned for a long time. It's what caused it to splinter into many decentralized cells and spread across the Western world.
Its splinter organisations on the other hand operate freely, as seen a few years ago when they burned down good chunks of Hamburg.
Hate speech not forbidden by EU law quite yet (Score:2)
Not long till free speech dies in Europe, but not quite there yet.
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Why wear a red armband when we have the technology to make red hats?
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Re-enacting the Beer Hall Putsch was a great dog whistle though.
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I think common sense dies first - all over the world :P
How actually would a country like Germany be able to block a messaging app? It is already technically impossible, so we do not even talk about legal ways/reasons.
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In general, free speech is more limited in Europe than in the US, it is not a new thing.
As a French, I know more about French law the German law, but AFAIK, both countries have similar ideas. Examples:
- Insulting people is illegal, insulting law enforcement agent in particular
- Defamation is illegal, even if you are telling the truth (if presented in a way that is misleading)
- Holocaust denial is illegal
- Hate speech is illegal in general, especially if it is racist
Maybe it sounds terrible to you Americans,
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What you describe is the legal tradition that came as a consequence of long aristocratic and royal rule system usually referred to legalistically as "privileged speech", and is an antithesis of free speech. It's about empowering aristocracy (in the word's original meaning, arestos - the excellent ones) to speak against the plebs, and disempowering plebs from speaking against the aristocracy. For example, the tradition of "truth is not defense against accusation of defamation" comes directly from tradition o
Re: Hate speech not forbidden by EU law quite yet (Score:2)
"truth is not defense against accusation of defamation"
In parts of Europe, specifically germane, it actually is. Ok, not a defense against "accusation" (nothing is a defense against accusation, everybody can accuse everybody else of anything), but one against prosecution. If what you claim of another person is true, then it's not defamation.
The difficulty is in proving it's actually true as, defamation usually targets opinion speech, which mostly is neither true nor untrue. The law has many facets there. Even so, justified opinion is usually protected, but it's
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The reason why I'm talking about "European tradition" rather than specific nations is because I'm attempting to address the general aspect of cultural difference between two distinctly different views. That of US style "free speech" vs European "privileged speech".
You can certainly find specific nations in Europe where my example is wrong, in that there is an allowance for that exact example. But you will find that in that country, there are other similar examples where free speech is constrained in a simil
Profanity exception? (Score:2)
Re: Profanity exception? (Score:2)
You mean like saying "Asshole!", because everybody does it?
Europe is not homogenous, so this is obviously not true for evryoy, but in German law, the answer is "no" as far as I know. An insult is an insult. (Also, there's no such thing as an insult of a police officer or public official vs "common" insult - it's just that a police officer is more likely to drag you to court over an insult than the average bear.)
Maybe we need to differentiate between defamation and insult: "You're a son of a a bitch" is obvi
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In most of Europe, concept of free speech is not the same concept as free speech in US tradition.
In our tradition, it's what you would call "privileged speech". I.e. some speech is privileged to be free, whereas others is not privileged and therefore banned. It's why many governments can openly persecute people who say "all [minority members] are evil" and cannot persecute people who say "all [majority members] are evil".
Pretty convincing sales technique (Score:2)
I take it this means the governments can't crack telegram, so they need an excuse to get rid of it.
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Fantastic and telling attempt to associate Telegram with Russia.
It's exceedingly unlikely that, at the same time, neither Germany nor any of the countries willing to share with them have been able to crack Telegram, whilst at the same time Russia has. Neither is there any credible source pointing to this.
Still, it's useful to associate with Russia, so that's what's done.
The monsters are not corpses. The monsters are alive and now controlling countries.
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For the record, this is the exact same kind of cooperation that Telegram has offered everyone from a very long time ago. This is for example the exact reason why IS sent a warning to its cells not to use Telegram, because governments would socially engineer access to a certain group, collect message history with illegal threats and such, go to Telegram with evidence of such behaviour and get information on discussion participants from Telegram.
What no one gets from Telegram is the keys to get into discussio
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Groups like the ADL, AJC, WJC, and virtually any other Jewish group is behind these moves. They simply can't afford to have the goyim figure things out.
80 years ago the Germans would have been very receptive to your message. They learned the hard way.
CWTCH (Score:1)
jesus christ beau (Score:2)
"Shutting Telegram"?
You're the worst editor. Truly. I've yet to see you even fix a single typo in any of your headlines or summaries.
it’s the last resort ! (Score:1)
thanks for letting us know what the “last resort” is. i suspect the “last resort” will be resorted to in short order. apparently there is no alternative.
Much more alarming than "hate" (Score:2)
From the article:
The messaging service has come under increased criticism as right-wing extremists turn to the platform to organize demonstrations against the government’s pandemic policies, some of which have turned violent. Authorities are investigating alleged death threats made over Telegram against Manuela Schwesig, the state premier of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
Death threats are obviously not okay, but they're a ubiquitous problem for high-profile policy makers, and can just as well be made by graffiti or dropping off a letter. Would Germany nix their entire postal system because of anonymous threats made by mail? I don't think so. Seems like this is more about shutting down protests of government policies.
Meanwhile, each iteration of these efforts by companies, institutions, and governments to shape discourse is resulting in more shielded and ins
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It makes sense to me that the German population is targeted by propaganda accordingly. The effects on Austria and the German speaking parts of Switzerland might be just side effects because they happen to speak basically the same language and are thus highly susceptible to that material.
How much of a role Telegram plays there I have no idea. From personal experiences
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> And whatever technology replaces Telegram, if it is killed, will not solve the problem
True. Just remember, while the summary says 'Germany' will close Telegram it is in fact a thought among parts of the government and politicians often are not on the fore front of having experience with internet. Angela Merkel famously remarked the internet was Neuland (virgin territory) in the 2010s.
That old form popular in usenet times comes to mind, a form with checkboxes at lines like:
"Your suggestion will
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oh, the post contains a number of typos and spelling errors, message and messenger etcetc.
Inevitable unintended consequences. (Score:2)
There is no European tradition of free speech worthy of mention (which is why bolting for the Colonies was once a solution and remains so to some extent) but the economic benefits of secure comms are necessary in a world permeated by nation-state threats performing industrial espionage which is far more potentially damaging than a few political cranks (who it bears reminding will get little traction unless the ruling class wreck the economy). Kill secure comms and you open the MAJORITY of comms to enemy sur
Won't work (Score:1)
Let's see (Score:2)
Let's see if majority comments or at least majority modded up comments are saying "German government hates free speech". ... or if that sentiment is only reserved for "other" people.
Shutting down apps (Score:2)
pwned (Score:2)
Senseless (Score:2)
This is what's actually happening, ... (Score:5, Insightful)
... as you can all imagine:
Dimwitt politician who has no effing idea how computers let alone digital networks work, comes up with a stupid idea to make some noise and get attention. ... And make a complete fool of herself.
The quite arguable point is, that people do get worked up about the fact that Telegram is distributed and anonymous to quite some extent while at the same time supporting very large groups and chatrooms. Nazis, Crackpots and other types thus have very effective means to gather and gain critical mass in conspiracy theories and other dangerous stuff. This actually *is* a problem IMHO and carries solid destabilizing potential, as it has people slowing move into separate realities. See Trumpists storming the US Capitol for details.
it breeches law? (Score:2)
Seriously, Bloomberg? Please look up the meaning of "breeches". Then find that you meant to write "breaches". Shame!
Curses! (Score:2)
Telegram has been shut down! Our hate group is foiled! Now we will just have to hold hands and sing kumbaya.
shutting down German gov is better prospect (Score:2)
They are not qualified to be the thought police.
Because ... (Score:2)
...the best solution to an angry, dissatisfied population (such that there are enough of them to spur angry, bitter, destructive conversations) is to COVER IT OVER and demand they stop talking.
That always works in a democracy.
Next you should call them stupid racists and marginalize them. Dismiss them for hiding behind their guns and bibles. Or just flat out call them white supremacists, that's dogwhistle for "you're a Nazi" these days, yes? (Because we've cheapened the words racist and Nazi by using them
Non-paywalled German link (Score:2)