📣 Creators, Exciting News!
Gate Square Certified Creator Application Is Now Live!
How to apply:
1️⃣ Open App → Tap [Square] at the bottom → Click your avatar in the top right
2️⃣ Tap [Get Certified] under your avatar
3️⃣ Once approved, you’ll get an exclusive verified badge that highlights your credibility and expertise!
Note: You need to update App to version 7.25.0 or above to apply.
The application channel is now open to KOLs, project teams, media, and business partners!
Super low threshold, just 500 followers + active posting to apply!
At Gate Square, everyone can be a community leader! �
Your Messages Are Not Safe—EU Pushes ‘Chat Control’ Law to Scan All Private Chats
Europe’s digital privacy showdown is reaching a boiling point as Telegram warns millions about an EU proposal that could force message scanning across platforms, sparking a fierce cross-border backlash that unites nations in defense of online freedom.
Telegram Alerts Millions—EU Law Could Force Apps to Scan All Private Messages
A major privacy battle is unfolding in Europe as tech leaders challenge government surveillance proposals. Telegram founder Pavel Durov shared on social media platform X on Oct. 14 that the company had sent a message to all its users in France to make them aware of the European Union’s “Chat Control” proposal that would require apps to scan every private message. The measure sparked fierce criticism for its potential to turn personal devices into surveillance tools.
Durov stated:
“It was set to vote on a law that would force apps to scan every private message, turning everyone’s phone into a spying tool,” he described.
“France led the push for this authoritarian law,” Durov noted. He explained that both former and current Interior Ministers, Bruno Retailleau and Laurent Nuñez, supported the proposal. In March, they stated that police should be able to access private messages sent by French citizens. The measure was approved with votes from the Republicans and President Emmanuel Macron’s Renaissance party.
Durov also criticized the proposal’s exemptions: “Officials’ and police messages wouldn’t be scanned either, since the law conveniently exempts them from surveillance.” He stressed:
Germany’s unexpected opposition to the plan, joined by Poland, Austria, the Netherlands, Czechia, Finland, Luxembourg, and Belgium, stopped the legislation from passing. “Today, we defended privacy: Germany’s sudden stand saved our rights. But freedoms are still threatened. While French leaders push for total access to private messages, the basic rights of French people — and all Europeans — remain in danger,” Durov said. The EU is expected to revisit the proposal in December, keeping the debate over privacy and surveillance alive.
FAQ 🧭
The EU’s “Chat Control” is a proposal that would mandate the scanning of private online communications, including end-to-end encrypted messages, by service providers to detect child sexual abuse material.
Telegram warned users that the law could strip away privacy rights and turn devices into surveillance tools for the government.
Germany, along with several other EU countries, opposed the law and effectively blocked it — at least for now.
The EU is expected to revisit the proposal in December, keeping data privacy and regulatory risks in the spotlight for tech companies.