Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov was arrested Saturday night by French authorities on allegations that his social media platform was being used for child pornography, drug trafficking and organized crime. The move sparked debate over free speech worldwide from prominent anti-censorship figures including Elon Musk, Robert F. Kennedy. Jr. and Edward Snowden. However, “the immediate freakout came from Russia,” reports Politico. “That’s because Telegram is widely used by the Russian military for battlefield communications thanks to problems with rolling out its own secure comms system. It’s also the primary vehicle for pro-war military bloggers and media – as well as millions of ordinary Russians.” From the report:

“They practically detained the head of communication of the Russian army,” Russian military blogger channel Povernutie na Z Voine said in a Telegram statement. The blog site Dva Mayora said that Russian specialists are working on an alternative to Telegram, but that the Russian army’s Main Communications Directorate has “not shown any real interest” in getting such a system to Russian troops. The site said Durov’s arrest may actually speed up the development of an independent comms system. Alarmed Russian policymakers are calling for Durov’s release.

“[Durov’s] arrest may have political grounds and be a tool for gaining access to the personal information of Telegram users,” the Deputy Speaker of the Russian Duma Vladislav Davankov said in a Telegram statement. “This cannot be allowed. If the French authorities refuse to release Pavel Durov from custody, I propose making every effort to move him to the UAE or the Russian Federation. With his consent, of course.” Their worry is that Durov may hand over encryption keys to the French authorities, allowing access to the platform and any communications that users thought was encrypted.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday that the arrest of Durov was “in no way a political decision.” The Russian embassy has demanded that it get access to Durov, but the Kremlin has so far not issued a statement on the arrest. “Before saying anything, we should wait for the situation to become clearer,” said Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov. However, officials and law enforcement agencies were instructed to clear all their communication from Telegram, the pro-Kremlin channel Baza reported. “Everyone who is used to using the platform for sensitive conversations/conversations should delete those conversations right now and not do it again,” Kremlin propagandist Margarita Simonyan said in a Telegram post. “Durov has been shut down to get the keys. And he’s going to give them.”

Edit: Not sure where the Slashdot summary got “Edward Snowden”, but he’s not mentioned in any of the links.

  • @BertramDitore
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    122 days ago

    You mixed and matched a lot of different sources in your summary, and did a fair amount of editorializing, it was honestly pretty confusing. Ed Snowden, for example, isn’t mentioned in any of your links, but you tossed him in with RFK and Musk, which misrepresents his ideology pretty seriously.

    I’d suggest keeping it simple, post one link and one summary of it if you feel the need. Maybe I’m overthinking it, but this post doesn’t feel right.

    • @PugJesus
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      -1022 days ago

      Ed Snowden, for example, isn’t mentioned in any of your links, but you tossed him in with RFK and Musk, which misrepresents his ideology pretty seriously.

      Ed Snowden, the Ron Paul supporter Ed Snowden? The Ed Snowden who took hundreds of thousands of documents which he didn’t release to journalists to Russia? The Ed Snowden who wanted the death penalty for whistleblowers before a black man became president? He’s different from RFK and Musk?

      • @[email protected]
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        622 days ago

        The Ed Snowden who took hundreds of thousands of documents which he didn’t release to journalists to Russia?

        [Citation needed]

        • @PugJesus
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          622 days ago

          Obama also knows Snowden stole much more than files regarding illegal activities or domestic surveillance by the NSA. The report of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (partly declassified on December 22, 2016) stated that Snowden had “removed” (not merely touched) 1.5 million documents, and he gave journalists only a tiny fraction of his haul. And even the portion Snowden “handed over” to journalists, the report found, compromised “secrets that protect American troops overseas and secrets that provide vital defenses against terrorists and nation-states.”

          https://www.newsweek.com/2017/01/20/why-obama-wont-pardon-edward-snowden-nsa-538632.html

            • @PugJesus
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              522 days ago

              As opposed to…?

              Who else is going to have the information necessary to make an analysis?

              You can disbelieve the House report if you want, and you wouldn’t be wrong about them being biased, but the only other source for estimating Snowden’s actions within the context of what he did vs. what he released is Snowden’s own claims; and though this may come as a shock, he, not unlike the US government, is also biased and has a history of tall-tale-telling.