Chat Control 1.0 and 2.0 Explained

(fightchatcontrol.eu)

170 points | by gasull 5 hours ago

9 comments

  • arjie 11 minutes ago
    I don't understand. How does it affect encrypted messages? It seems like either you need:

    1. allow MITM decryption by a privileged authority

    2. require all devices doing E2EE have a non-user-modifiable piece of functionality to scan on-device

    The second is the Apple style on-device CSAM scanner? I have to say that I do sometimes think about it while taking a photo of my baby playing in the bathtub - photos like my parents have of me which have been kind of nice to see later. It would be a pity if I had to have a separate analog camera just for baby photos because then I'd need to learn the whole developing film stuff.

    • petcat 7 minutes ago
      > It would be a pity if I had to have a separate analog camera just for baby photos because then I'd need to learn the whole developing film stuff.

      Polaroid coming back in business! I would not complain at all if we started reverting some of our lifestyle behaviors back to analog.

      • arjie 1 minute ago
        Haha, we do have those Instax Mini cameras. They make for a nice dose of nostalgia. We have a big frame full of photos of our friends and family on the wall and it's nice to walk by.
  • Zufriedenheit 14 minutes ago
    They claim to protect consumers and privacy and then push this creepy surveillance state.
    • petcat 2 minutes ago
      At this point I think it's obvious that EU is in turmoil. They're struggling to come to grips with the idea of a Russian invasion on their eastern borders, and simultaneously USA pivoting to Asia and not willing to front their defense after 40+ years of imploring them to do so themselves.

      They've outsourced nearly every critical component of a large sustainable society to the rest of the world. Russia, USA, China, India.

      But at the same time, their politicians can't do anything because the minute they suggest that they might have to start cutting pensions and public welfare and all of these different things in order to start supporting national industry and defense, they lose immediately.

  • olejorgenb 1 hour ago
    Chat control 1.0

    "A temporary derogation from the ePrivacy Directive that allowed (but did not require) providers to scan private messages of unsuspected users for potential child sexual abuse material."

    Does that imply it's currently not allowed?

    EDIT: apparently not enforced at least:

    "Chat Control 1.0 expires

    The legal ground for voluntary, indiscriminate scanning ends. Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Snap state they will continue scanning private messages regardless. "

    • closuregarden 1 hour ago
      Yes, the derogation expired on 4 April 2026.
  • zoobab 51 minutes ago
    Age verification for 'appstores' (debian repos?) is inside ChatControl v2.
  • terabytest 21 minutes ago
    As a EU citizen I’m at a loss for what to do about this. I feel that they’re going against any average citizen’s interest. What can we do to make them stop?
    • 73738384 0 minutes ago
      Just use the authorized EU messaging app goy, do you have anything to hide?
    • LaurensBER 15 minutes ago
      Short-term, follow the steps on the website and contact your political representative to explain to them why it's such a bad idea.

      Long-term, switch to another messenger app that's opensource and truly E2E encrypted.

      That also shows why this is such a foolish proposal.

      The truly scary people are not on the "consumer" chat apps anyway and most certainly will be the first ones to switch to another communication channel if this passes. If this will have any effect it'll be that some, "dumb" criminals will be caught.

    • raverbashing 10 minutes ago
      The irony is that those questions can only be legally questioned when they're approved (and sometimes have a defined implementation)

      Then there's the whole kerfuffle about how to actually implement this

      So the thing that comforts me is that it's a dumpster fire all the way down and I'm sure there will be plenty of legal complaints about it

  • rwq-askh 1 hour ago
    EU politicians spend more time on chat control than on the reopening of Hormuz or EU energy security. It is a complete joke.
    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
      > EU politicians spend more time on chat control than on the reopening of Hormuz

      I thought I'd heard it all here on HN, but expecting EU to clean up after the US shooting itself in the foot with a completely unnecessary war probably comes somewhere in top 5 easily.

      • joe_mamba 1 hour ago
        >but expecting EU to clean up after the US shooting itself in the foot

        Please don't pretend to misunderstand a point just to manufacture the opportunity to reply in bad faith.

        Nobody in EU is saying the EU should clean up others' mess around the world, people are just saying the EU should be busy building domestic capacity and capabilities to insulate itself from the issues caused by others around the world, such as securing domestic energy supplies so that the next time USrael blows up the middle east, the EU can just eat it no issue indead of being at the mercy of foreign oligarchs for overpriced energy.

        US is so monetary rich and energy rich that they can afford to blow up the middle east every 10 years with little domestic consequences for them, and still have enough gas to drive their Ford F-450s Super Duty to Walmart, heat their pools and AC their homes, without leading to national unrest, but EU is so energy starved that securing energy independence should have been a national security issue for the past 20 years already, not since 2022.

        And not just energy, EU is exposed in other areas as well (SW, AI, semiconductors, lithium batteries, agriculture, manufacturing, defense, etc), and again, it will only wake up in panic mode at the 11th hour when US or China twists their arm in some spontaneous international dispute. But politicians instead of focusing on preemptively securing these vulnerabilities BEFORE shit hits the fan, are too busy focusing on controlling people's privacy, which is what EU citizens and commenters here are criticizing.

        • rpadovani 50 minutes ago
          > Nobody in EU is saying the EU should clean up others' mess around the world

          That's literally what the top poster said.

          Your points make sense, "EU should reopen Hormuz" is laughable

        • embedding-shape 52 minutes ago
          > people are just saying the EU should be busy building domestic capacity and capabilities to insulate itself from the issues caused by others around the world

          If this is what you wanted to have said, say that from the beginning instead of leaving some vague and ambiguous "general complaint about the Strait of Hormuz" and maybe others like me will understand you better.

          Somehow you seem to imply none of those things are happening right now in Europe, is this really your perspective? You think no one is thinking about domestic energy supplies? Do you not understand how EU works? Lots of things are happening in parallel, not the least a lot of work around energy dependency and other core infrastructure issues.

          • logicchains 15 minutes ago
            >Somehow you seem to imply none of those things are happening right now in Europe, is this really your perspective? You think no one is thinking about domestic energy supplies? Do you not understand how EU works? Lots of things are happening in parallel, not the least a lot of work around energy dependency and other core infrastructure issues.

            "The purpose of a system is what it does". So far there's no sign of any progress, it's just getting worse. The Draghi report was two years ago and nothing has been done to address the issues it raised.

        • petre 42 minutes ago
          > EU is so energy starved that securing energy independence should have been a national security issue for the past 20 years already, not since 2022

          Setting up the next Stasi is more important to the eurocrats than energy and food security. Wait, they did the Mercosur agreement which will cripple more of the domestic agriculture in exchange for dumping German diesel cars onto unsuspecting South Americans.

          But they can't do shit about Hormuz. Only talk, talk and more useless talk, go away USA you're not using our bases to refuel and then some more useless talk.

          • Grikbdl 31 minutes ago
            > go away USA you're not using our bases to refuel

            Tbf this is only the position of a few extreme governments. Other European countries have been perfectly happy to let the US use their bases for this.

            • petre 18 minutes ago
              Yes. Basically Eastern Europe, which is what the US actually needed. Bulgaria speculated a bit for the opportunity to spend 1bn on weapons for their second hand F16s (better than plowing MiG 21s that they had).

              Probably also why we now have a flood of lame Trump jokes about Meloni.

          • hsuduebc2 11 minutes ago
            You mistake hackernews with xitter and truth social. This is just pure bullshittery.
    • inglor_cz 41 minutes ago
      They do have us in their power. They don't have Iran under the same power.
  • ChrisArchitect 1 hour ago
    Related today:

    Chat Control passed first round in EU Parliament

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48819008

  • cynicalsecurity 58 minutes ago
    To everyone who wants to dismantle the EU: this is not the solution. Dismantling the EU is like burning down your own house just to get rid of flies. The UK left the EU and implemented its own version of chat control - Online Safety Act - without any transparency or real opposition. The right solution is the political fight. Europe is our home. We must keep it in good shape by getting rid of anything that makes it worse - like Chat Control.
    • Insimwytim 45 minutes ago

        Dismantling the EU is like burning down your own house 
      
      I'm not an expert, but isn't "your own house" should rather be your country in this analogy? It ought to be still there without some bureaucratic institution on top of it.
      • patcon 39 minutes ago
        Just think "neighborhood", no? This seems like splitting hairs... And to what end? to take a shot at EU supra-national structure? ("What, you don't ally to your country?" kinda shade.)

        -- Canadian

      • hsuduebc2 27 minutes ago
        Maybe “your own city” would be a more precise metaphor than “your own house”. Your country is your house, but the EU is the city around it, with the roads, infrastructure, shared rules, market, security, and institutions that make the house function.

        The concept of a modern nation is also relatively new. It emerged as an identity for groups of people who were no longer defined mainly by the monarchs ruling over them. That identity replaced the king as the symbol of belonging.

        But now nationalism is often doing the opposite. Instead of freeing people from old power structures, it is holding Europe back.

        So yes, maybe it is not literally “your house”, but the point still stands. Burning down the city around your house is not exactly a smart move either.

        • logicchains 10 minutes ago
          >the EU is the city around it, with the roads, infrastructure, shared rules, market, security, and institutions that make the house function.

          If you measure "function" by the relative economic and military power of the country, then the EU has overwhelmingly degraded the function of its initial members compared to when they joined.

    • hsuduebc2 45 minutes ago
      Exactly. This is ridiculous behavior. Simple solutions for complex problems are usually the wrong ones.

      One griefer which promised prosperit fueled Brexit, which caused Britain visible stagnation and now he is a candidate for MP promising to fixing it all yet again.

      I need to repeat, that Simple solutions for complex problems usually do not work.

    • joe_mamba 43 minutes ago
      >Dismantling the EU is like burning down your own house just to get rid of flies.

      I don't like this comparison at all. Europe, the land that housed, fed and scarified my ancestors, is my house, not this supra-governmental corrupt bureaucratic institution called the EU that does not represent me nor speak in my name.

      Empires, monarchies, governments and all such man-made institutions like the EU get torn down all time, when they become too bloated, incompetent, corrupt and cronyistic and lose legitimacy in the eyes of the people. See all human history.

      Forests go through prescribed burns in order to be saved, for their own good, and so must political institutions. And when the rot is too big, it can't simply be "patched" anymore, it needs to be torn down and rebuilt from scratch with fresh new people, which in turn will get corrupted over time and get torn down, and so on, rinse and repeat because that's human nature.

      Ironically, the EU has achieved its goal of uniting all Europeans, as in they're all now united via hating what the EU has become and what it's doing.

      • cassepipe 22 minutes ago
        Let's stop the blut and soil BS right here. I am all for european panationalism but don't pretend that Europe is "your house" where "your ancestors" were. You come from a very specific culture inside it which has its own specific language and traditions and that has spent most its history warring with its neighbours, sometimes people in the next village speaking a different version of your lanuage. My ancestors and your ancestor probably scarified each other, the land didn't

        Turns out unifying a lot of different countries that have different languages and interest is a hard problem and in order to satisfy everyone a little bureaucracy is the price to pay. You may find it too bloated, too slow or even too corrupt but burning it to the ground is a lunacy for people who entertain clean slate delusions: Whenever it happens, it is a catastrophy for everyone but a few opportunists.

        Europe is imperfect but it has rejected the idea of war outside of itself. I don't think any European citizen would go to war with their neighbour. Just that is an amazing achievement. Now it can stay an economic union and big powers can pick and choose how to manipulate each one of us for their own purposes or it can strive to be a political union and have a standing on the international stage. We're not there yet but we will, eventually, we just need to hang tight. Things take time.

        • logicchains 13 minutes ago
          >Europe is imperfect but it has rejected the idea of war outside of itself. I don't think any European citizen would go to war with their neighbour. Just that is an amazing achievement.

          Not really. South American countries don't go to war with each other and they don't have a union. Nor do central American countries.

        • joe_mamba 17 minutes ago
          >a little bureaucracy is the price to pay.

          Taking away people's privacy and freedom of speech is a little more problematic than just "a little bureaucracy".

          >Europe is imperfect but it has rejected the idea of war outside of itself. I don't think any European citizen would go to war with their neighbour. Just that is an amazing achievement.

          That WAS an achievement in the past, but if you dissolve the EU institution tomorrow, no former EU member state will suddenly got to war with their neighbour just because the EU doesn't exist anymore. So the myth that the EU is preventing war in EU is bogus. That was history, this is today.

      • hsuduebc2 14 minutes ago
        I agree on the base of the argument. EU after all was created because of one tragedy. I'm absolutely sure that there will be more gruesome wars on the continent and I even wouldn't rule out the collapse in the future because petty tribalism holding everything back as always.

        But this is the hatred you are talking about?

        https://www.politico.eu/article/europeans-embrace-eu-gloom-w...

  • delichon 10 minutes ago
    To be fair, this is even worse.

    https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2026/07/07/european-parli...

    The party that they want to ban is a consistent and loud opponent of chat control.

    It would be hard to imagine a US party that didn't believe the other party is out of compliance with US values. As a justification for blocking democracy it's universal and ever present.