• The European chat control law could block the functioning of open sourc

    From Roberto A. Foglietta@21:1/5 to All on Thu Feb 2 20:00:01 2023
    Hi all,

    an Italian article which is important to read and possibly an urgent
    matter to address.

    https://www.ilsoftware.it/articoli.asp?tag=La-legge-europea-sul-controllo-delle-chat-potrebbe-bloccare-il-funzionamento-dei-sistemi-operativi-open-source_25561

    GOOGLE TRANSLATION

    The European chat control law could block the functioning of open
    source operating systems

    Mullvad, a well-known VPN service provider, focuses attention on one
    of the most unfortunate consequences of the proposed law that aims to
    force messaging apps to scan users' personal messages: open source
    software repositories and archives could become illegal.

    In May 2022, the European Commission put forward a bill that could
    force messaging apps to scan private messages exchanged between normal
    users.

    As can be learned by reading the text of the regulation of the
    European Parliament and of the Council, which is part of the broader
    framework of the Digital Markets Act (DMA), the aims are certainly
    noble and have the aim of preventing the solicitation of minors via
    chat.

    Prescriptions such as those contained in the European law proposal,
    however, would in fact mean saying goodbye to all the guarantees
    offered by end-to-end encryption mechanisms when the use of encryption
    is fundamental today and is now a tool to which users do not they
    should never give up.

    WhatsApp won't crack end-to-end encryption, and at this point, by CEO
    Will Cathcart's own admission, the only way instant messaging apps
    could go is by scanning users' messages and media locally, on their
    same devices.

    Apple had already tried to do something similar but the initiative
    aimed at scanning the content of iOS, macOS and iPadOS devices had
    been so strongly criticized that Apple gave up. Fierce, among others,
    the notes of EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) which spoke of an unacceptable interference in the private sphere of citizens.

    Because the European Commission's proposal can lead to the blocking of
    open source platforms and repositories used by operating systems

    Patrick Breyer, MEP of the Pirate Party, put black and white all the
    critical points of the European law proposal speaking of Chat Control
    2.0: the result was a completely automated mass surveillance system
    that has no precedent in the Western world, the screening by third
    parties of the content of cloud storage services, the mandatory age verification with the consequent end of anonymous communication,
    censorship activities on online application stores and the exclusion
    of minors from the digital world. Reads the page set up by Breyer.

    "As an unintended consequence," Mullvad, a well-known Swedish company
    offering VPN services, writes today, "the proposed EU law on chat
    control will not only take totalitarian control of all private
    communications but will also ban operating systems open source".

    According to Mullvad, among the side effects of the regulation of
    which little or no discussion has been made to date, there would be a
    ban on all existing open source operating systems, including the main
    Android stores and third-party stores such as the historic F- Droids.

    Software repositories have been used almost universally by open source operating systems since the 1990s as the primary method of
    distributing applications and security updates. These online archives
    are often created and maintained by small businesses or volunteers;
    they are hosted by hundreds of organizations such as universities and
    internet service providers around the world.

    One of the main ones, the volunteer-run Debian Package Archive,
    currently contains over 170,000 software packages.

    These services are not built around the concept of an account and do
    not provide for the verification of the users' identity: the download
    of the software takes place directly to the client systems that
    request it, in a completely anonymous way.

    Here, the European law proposal would also oblige these repositories
    to no longer be managed anonymously, to verify the user's identity and
    to ascertain their age.

    To meet legal requirements, the open source world would be forced to
    completely redesign its software update procurement and distribution
    system, radical organizational restructuring with the consequent
    centralization and reconstruction of the package distribution
    infrastructure.

    Obviously we are only talking about a purely theoretical approach
    because the technical-practical issues would be insurmountable.

    “To comply with the law everything should be shut down globally as
    servers delivering software and security updates cannot distinguish
    between a web server, a Japanese software developer, a fridge and a
    teenager from the EU,” he notes Mullvad. "It may seem incredible that
    the authors of the legislation did not think about it, but it is not
    so surprising considering that this is just one of the many gigantic consequences of this poorly thought out and written law".

    Mullvad is one of the VPN managers that has already started migrating
    to diskless servers since 2022 to protect users' privacy and personal
    data even more effectively.

    Best regards, R-

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