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Censorship

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov's Arrest Is Part of a Global War on Free Speech

Governments around the world seek to suppress ideas and control communications channels.

J.D. Tuccille | 8.28.2024 7:00 AM

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Person holding a white piece of paper that says FREE DUROV next to paper airplanes stuck in a bush. | Kommersant Photo Agency/Kommersant/Newscom
(Kommersant Photo Agency/Kommersant/Newscom)

It's appropriate that, days after the French government arrested Pavel Durov, CEO of the encrypted messaging app Telegram, for failing to monitor and restrict communications as demanded by officials in Paris, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg confirmed that his company, which owns Facebook, was subjected to censorship pressures by U.S. officials. Durov's arrest, then, stands as less of a one-off than as part of a concerted effort by governments, including those of nominally free countries, to control speech.

"Telegram chief executive Pavel Durov is expected to appear in court Sunday after being arrested by French police at an airport near Paris for alleged offences related to his popular messaging app," reported France24.

A separate story noted claims by Paris prosecutors that he was detained for "running an online platform that allows illicit transactions, child pornography, drug trafficking and fraud, as well as the refusal to communicate information to authorities, money laundering and providing cryptographic services to criminals."

Freedom for Everybody or for Nobody

Durov's alleged crime is offering encrypted communications services to everybody, including those who engage in illegality or just anger the powers that be. But secure communications are a feature, not a bug, for most people who live in a world in which "global freedom declined for the 18th consecutive year in 2023," according to Freedom House. Fighting authoritarian regimes requires means of exchanging information that are resistant to penetration by various repressive police agencies.

"Telegram, and other encrypted messaging services, are crucial for those intending to organise protests in countries where there is a severe crackdown on free speech. Myanmar, Belarus and Hong Kong have all seen people relying on the services," Index on Censorship noted in 2021.

And if bad people occasionally use encrypted apps such as Telegram, they use phones and postal services, too. The qualities that make communications systems useful to those battling authoritarianism are also helpful to those with less benign intentions. There's no way to offer security to one group without offering it to everybody.

Durov's Second Clash With an Authoritarian Government

A CNN report on the case (I watch so you don't have to) weirdly linked Durov to Russian President Vladimir Putin, insinuating the two are conspiring. But as Reuters helpfully points out, "Telegram, based in Dubai, was founded by Durov, who left Russia in 2014 after he refused to comply with demands to shut down opposition communities on his VK social media platform, which he has sold."

The Internet Archive contains links to 2014 posts by Durov boasting, in Russian, that he refused to surrender information about Ukrainian users of VKontakte to the Putin regime and balked at barring the late Alexei Navalny's opposition group from the service.

"I'm afraid there is no going back," Durov told TechCrunch after leaving Russia to build Telegram. "Not after I publicly refused to cooperate with the authorities. They can't stand me."

Telegram was initially blocked in Russia, but the ban was unpopular and unsuccessful, and soon dropped. The service is now widely used by both Russians and Ukrainians as a digital battleground in their war.

Given that Telegram was founded by a free speech champion who fled his home country after refusing to monitor and censor speech for the authorities, it's very easy to suspect that Pavel Durov has run afoul of authoritarians operating under a different flag, no matter the protestations of French President Emmanuel Macron that the arrest "is in no way a political decision" and that France "is deeply committed to freedom of expression and communication."

This is the same Macron, after all, who last year, after riots he insisted were coordinated online, huffed "We have to think about the social networks, about the bans we'll have to put in place. When things get out of control, we might need to be able to regulate or cut them off."

More recently, free speech groups objected to European Union threats to censor political content on X—specifically, an interview with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

The U.S. Has Its Own Free Speech Concerns

Matters are better in the United States, but not so much (as we have every right to demand). The Twitter Files and the Facebook Files revealed serious pressure brought to bear by the U.S. government on social media companies to stifle dissenting views and inconvenient (to the political class) news stories. If any further confirmation was needed, Zuckerberg sent a letter to the House Judiciary Committee on August 26 regretting the company's role in succumbing to pressure to censor content.

"In 2021, senior officials from the Biden administration, including the White House, repeatedly pressured our teams for months to censor certain COVID-19 content, including humor and satire," Zuckerberg wrote to Chairman Jim Jordan (R–Ohio). "I believe the government pressure was wrong, and I regret that we were not more outspoken about it."

Zuckerberg also admitted to suppressing reports about the incriminating contents of Hunter Biden's laptop at the FBI's behest. "We're ready to push back if something like this happens again," he promised.

Fighting a Free Speech Recession

Durov's arrest isn't an isolated incident. It comes amid what Jacob Mchangama, (founder of the Danish think tank Justitia and executive director of The Future of Free Speech) calls "a free speech recession." He warns that "liberal democracies, rather than constituting a counterweight to the authoritarian onslaught, are themselves contributing to the free-speech recession."

"Recession" might be too soft a word to describe a phenomenon that has governments attempting to suppress ideas and arresting entrepreneurs who operate neutral communications channels. These are harsh policies with real costs in terms of human freedom.

Telegram didn't respond to a request for comment, but in a public statement said, "it is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform."

In a post from March, Pavel Durov himself commented, "All large social media apps are easy targets for criticism due to the content they host." He vowed, "we shall solve any potential challenges the same way we do everything else — with efficiency, innovation and respect for privacy and freedom of speech."

Durov's arrest shows that he, like all champions of free expression, must wage their battles for liberty against the active opposition of government officials even in nominally free countries. Free speech is as important as ever, but more besieged than it has been in a long time.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Brickbat: What Have We Here?

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

CensorshipFree SpeechFirst AmendmentSocial MediaInternetFranceTechnologyEuropeEncryption
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  1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

    Why are Reason editors just learning of this?

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   9 months ago

      There's been two articles on it already and Liz mentioned it in the Roundup yesterday. It's hardly been overlooked.

      1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

        Meaning since 2016 when it all ramped up.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

          Facts changed?

      2. Rick James   9 months ago

        There’s been two articles on it already and Liz mentioned it in the Roundup yesterday. It’s hardly been overlooked.

        My definition of 'overlooked' is more strict than yours.

  2. Nobartium   9 months ago

    Perhaps we should cease calling our contemporaries liberal (or democratic).

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

      Are they ready to be called Marxists again?

      1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

        I’ve been calling them that for decades. I’m just waiting for everyone to catch up and admit we have to get rid of them. As there is no version of events where the democrat party can be allowed to exist, unless we want a fully Marxist government,

      2. middlefinger   9 months ago

        They prefer communist. I guess since Schwab at the WEF has an out and proud Lenin portrait in his office, it’s all fair game. Additionally the Tim Walz pick.

        https://jacobin.com/2024/08/communists-san-francisco-lgbt-race

        From the leftists:
        “Bring American communists out of the shadows and closets.”

    2. Thoritsu   9 months ago

      The term "liberal" has meant nothing of the sort for decades. Very unfortunate.

  3. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

    Yes, it's a global war on free speech--AND on terrorism, child exploitation, illegal drugs, disinformation, "hate", etc.

    Are you really happy with "anything goes"?

    1. SQRLSY   9 months ago

      “Anything goes” as in ACTIONS? Of course not! But in pure SPEECH? Yes! The only reason why power pigs get away with this shit is "tech"... Pen and paper and cameras are OLD... So they can NOT get away with blaming pen manufacturers for twat people do with pens! Computers and code and the internet are relatively new, though, so we dumbshits who are SOOOO scared of "tech" let the power pigs get away with this!

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   9 months ago

      Yes, it’s a global war on free speech–AND on terrorism, child exploitation, illegal drugs, disinformation, “hate”, etc.

      As if those are actually the reasons.

      1. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

        I’ll take that as a “no”.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   9 months ago

          Just because you're going along with your leftist buddies' cooked-up charges doesn't mean the charges aren't bullshit.

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

      Are YOU really happy with the security state, as long as it enforces policies you like?

      1. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

        No, I'm a libertarian. How about you?

    4. Rossami   9 months ago

      re: disinformation and "hate" - Yes, I really would be happy with "anything goes" because anything the government does is worse than what we do to ourselves. Do people who have the right to free speech say stupid stuff? Of course they do. And we consumers are a hell of a lot better suited to sorting it out than self-interested bureaucrats and career politicians backed by the government's monopoly on lethal force.

      re: illegal drugs - Yeah, I'm happy with "anything goes" there, too. No, I don't want my kids on drugs but the government programs to stop them are vastly worse for society than the drugs themselves.

      re: child exploitation - No, I'm not happy with "anything goes" there but a) actual exploitation is incredibly rare and b) government already had all the tools it needed to prosecute those real crimes. The "think of the children" attacks on freedom of speech are transparent pretexts.

      re: terrorism - That's bad, too. But again, the cure is proving worse than the disease.

      1. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

        I’ll take that as also a “no”.

        I agree with you. Which is why we need to move on to the next steps, which are to determine reasonable limits on the different categories and/or types of "speech", debate the pros and cons, enact laws which enforce those (and only those) distinctions and pass them through the courts to make sure it's all Constitutional.

        1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   9 months ago

          So you're all for A1, but...?
          FOAD, asshole.

        2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

          No. Filth like you shouldn’t be determining anything. You’re just another Marxist with totalitarian dreams.

          1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

            I see a grey box has appeared below my comment. The thing that made it should be euthanized by animal control. Probably by a 12 gauge shotgun shell.

            1. SQRLSY   9 months ago

              Hey Punk Boogers! HERE is your “fix”! Try shit, you might LIKE shit!!!

              https://rentahitman.com/ … If’n ye check ’em out & buy their service, ye will be… A Shitman hiring a hitman!!!

              If’n ye won’t help your own pathetic self, even when given a WIDE OPEN invitation, then WHY should ANYONE pity you? Punk Boogers, if your welfare check is too small to cover the hitman… You shitman you… Then take out a GoFundMe page already!!!

        3. SQRLSY   9 months ago

          Sure, sounds good! For just ONE example where, in the real world, we need SOME "speech control", true (non-sarcastic, non-artistic-movies-plays-etc.) solicitations for, or offers of, "murder for hire" are "beyond the pale".

          A lot of this is in place already, I think...

        4. Rossami   9 months ago

          If you think we agree then you seriously need to work on your reading comprehension. No we do not need to "determine reasonable limits" on categories or types of speech. There are no scenarios where the benefits giving the government that kind of power outweigh the long-term dangers.

          1. SQRLSY   9 months ago

            Murder for hire solicitations, really? Government Almighty should NOT be able to put the kibosh on those?

            1. Rossami   9 months ago

              What's illegal is the murder part. Conspiracy to commit murder survives, too. No need (or justification) to make the speech part illegal.

            2. Bruce D   9 months ago

              Under current, law people can already be prosecuted for that.

          2. SQRLSY   9 months ago

            If Government Almighty fucks up the enforcement of anti-murder laws, for example, I don't think we should call for the abolishment of anti-murder laws... We should call for the election of a more sensible and competent Government Almighty, which will properly perform its job!

        5. Bruce D   9 months ago

          "Which is why we need to move on to the next steps, which are to determine reasonable limits on the different categories and/or types of “speech”, debate the pros and cons, enact laws which enforce those (and only those) distinctions and pass them through the courts to make sure it’s all Constitutional."

          That's already been done. There are plenty of court precedents allowing prosecution or civil suits or injunctions in the cases of incitement, fraud, defamation or libel. No further extension of government power is justified or necessary.

    5. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   9 months ago

      "Are you really happy with “anything goes”?"

      Are you really stupid enough to drag that strawman out?
      Oh, look who it is! Yes, s/he is stupid enough to do so.

    6. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

      Yes, your kind inflict all those things on humanity. You’re the bad guys.

    7. Bruce D   9 months ago

      “, it’s a global war on free speech–AND on terrorism…

      One person’s “terrorist” is another person’s freedom fighter. Actual terrorists can be apprehended or neutralized by specific investigation getting warrants for IP addresses from service providers. There’s plenty of open source encryption for terrorists to use in the absence of Telegram or similar apps.

      “…child exploitation…”

      As I stated above, there’s plenty of open source encryption for exploiters to use in the absence of Telegram or similar apps. Child exploitation can be fought by specific investigation getting warrants for IP addresses, packet sizes and timestamps from service provider’s logs. Once one has that information, perpetrators can be located and arrested without need for violation of internet freedom.

      “…illegal drugs…”

      By right, drugs should be legalized. Drug prohibition is morally wrong. If Telegram thwarts drug enforcement, that’s a good thing.

      But again, there are plenty of ways for drug dealers to conduct encrypted business without Telegram, simply by email using burner phones, and various other methods.

      Also, the narcs can still investigate individual cases by getting warrants for info from service providers.

      Best, most moral solution is simply to legalize drugs. Prohibition is an infringement of individual rights and is absolutely morally wrong.

      “…disinformation, “hate”, etc.”

      One person’s disinformation is another person’s truth. Who is to decide what is disinformation? Fact is, my opinion is fact and your opinion, ObviouslyNotSpam, is disinformation. So, therefore I have a right to have your post censored for “disinformation”, ya think?

      Disinformation, in itself, does not necessarily cause damage. Concrete actions do. In cases of libel, defamation, and incitement, warrants or subpoenas could be issued for specific users IP addresses and cases prosecuted as I describe above without limiting internet freedom.

      People have an absolute moral right to the disinformation, without being "sheilded" by government, so as to make up their own minds whether it’s disinformation or not, and to do their own political analysis of the disinformation or “hate” speech. In a free society, we understand it is the individual’s right and obligation to determine disinformation from truth, not the government’s.

      ‘Are you really happy with “anything goes”?’

      Yes. There’s far more benefit to be had by restricting, and being able to defeat, government power to censor (it's called limited government) than any possible evil that censorship could prevent, not to mention the evil of censorship itself. Governments have mass murdered and caused more misery than common criminals or “terrorists” ever have. Government is to be feared much more than common criminals and terrorists.

      1. SQRLSY   9 months ago

        Thanks Bruce D for a detailed and balanced take!

        1. Bruce D   9 months ago

          Thank you, SQRLSY.

          Another downside of censorship is that it gives misinformation and disinformation credibility it otherwise would not have. When something is censored, it raises the question of why, which raises the question of maybe because it’s true. Otherwise, if it wasn’t true, they’d refute it with evidence, objective references and logic. But, instead, they choose censorship because they can’t refute it because it’s true. So, it tends to appear in the public’s minds that it’s censored because it’s true. And it gets credibility it shouldn’t have, and wouldn't have otherwise.

          Thanks for your kind words.

    8. Zeb   9 months ago

      Except for terrorism and child exploitation, yes.

      Bad things happen isn't a good reason to have governments able to snoop on absolutely any electronic communications.

  4. Bill Dalasio   9 months ago

    The Twitter Files and the Facebook Files revealed serious pressure brought to bear by the U.S. government on social media companies to stifle dissenting views and inconvenient (to the political class) news stories.

    Can't be. I was assured by the staff of a libertarian magazine that Twitter and Facebook were private companies who were free platform and deplatform whoever they wanted to. Maybe you should do a debate with them.

    1. Bertram Guilfoyle   9 months ago

      Also I've been told by the wisest commenters here that the twitter files were debunked.

    2. Thoritsu   9 months ago

      They seem to be recovering from TDS.

    3. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

      Yes, "serious pressure" which apparently did not actually result in any censorship. Zuck is just using the "overwhelming pressure" claim to deflect from the fact that he wasn't especially bothered about complying with his own ToS, but did still want to be able to blame the government for "making him do it".

      Durov is arguably being coerced; Zuckerberg was obviously not--and indeed, now says he'll have more of a spine next time. Good for him!

      1. Wally   9 months ago

        I can tell you are a liar. On the same page here you claim to be a Libertarian, but think there should be limits on speech. Are you also a moron?
        The FBI shows up at your place and mildly threatens you if you don't do as they say. It a lot like the mafia showing up at your pizza joint and saying, "nice place you got here. Be a shame if something should happen to it."
        This is the same FBI that set up a conspiracy to kidnap a governor as part of their election interference campaign.
        In that moment, most people are going to choose to comply with the secret state police.

  5. Quo Usque Tandem   9 months ago

    If this isn't stopped now we will soon wake up to find ourselves as characters in a Ronald Reagan speech; the one about what it used to be like to live like free men and women.

    And never doubt for one second that this is the kind of world progressives want; assuming it is run by them, of course.

  6. Michael Ejercito   9 months ago

    Alexander Vindman turned against the Constitution he once swore to uphold.

    https://x.com/AVindman/status/1827704034783879439

    1. damikesc   9 months ago

      Fooled you. Had his fingers crossed the WHOLE time.

      1. Michael Ejercito   9 months ago

        Make no mistake. He was hiding FJB's criminality!

    2. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

      What did he say which makes you say that?

      "While Durov holds French citizenship, is arrested for violating French law, this has broader implications for other social media, including Twitter. There’s a growing intolerance for platforming disinfo & malign influence & a growing appetite for accountability. Musk should be nervous."

      Should Musk not be nervous? Is there not a growing global intolerance for "anything goes"? Does Durov's arrest not have broader implications beyond France?

      1. Bertram Guilfoyle   9 months ago

        This is not hard to understand.

        Vindman is talking approvingly of arresting people for spreading (govt defined) "misinformation".

        Musk should indeed be nervous, since US govt, and govt adjacent people (Vindman) would approve of doing the same thing to him.

        Vindman is a former Army officer who favors 1984 brought to life - he's a disgrace.

        1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

          Vindman should die in federal prison for treason.

      2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   9 months ago

        "...Is there not a growing global intolerance for “anything goes”?..."

        Need help with that strawman? I hear sarcasmic is available and he hates honest as much as you seem to.

      3. Red Rocks White Privilege   9 months ago

        "anything goes" is a false assertion.

        1. Bruce D   9 months ago

          ^This. There are plenty of existing laws and court precedents to enable prosecution of real offenses. Nothing more is needed.

    3. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

      Again?

  7. CountmontyC   9 months ago

    And the assault on free speech is almost entirely from the left.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   9 months ago

      Nuh-uh. MAGA Nazis want to ban gay masturbation picture books in pre-schools!

      1. Eeyore   9 months ago

        It's still OK on your coffee table at home, which is a more appropriate place to masterbate than at school.

    2. Rossami   9 months ago

      Tom Cotton hasn't been in the news much lately but he's a strong counter-example.

      But in fairness, you did say "almost".

  8. Rick James   9 months ago

    The U.S. Has Its Own Free Speech Concerns
    Matters are better in the United States, but not so much (as we have every right to demand). The Twitter Files and the Facebook Files revealed serious pressure brought to bear by the U.S. government on social media companies to stifle dissenting views and inconvenient (to the political class) news stories. If any further confirmation was needed, Zuckerberg sent a letter to the House Judiciary Committee on August 26 regretting the company's role in succumbing to pressure to censor content.

    Imagine if the country's premier Libertarian publication had not been too busy wearing masks so they didn't look like Republicans while the commenting rabble were warning about this, long before there were any "Twitter Files".

  9. NoVaNick   9 months ago

    Silly rabbit! Free speech (and freedom in general) are for elites.

  10. NoVaNick   9 months ago

    This is part of a much larger trend against the two things the democrats are using to define themselves “freedom” and “democracy”. I don’t think it’s a new tactic for those who aspire to power to say they represent something they are in fact very much against (doublespeak). But it’s on the us if we allow them to get away with it.

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   9 months ago

      (But don't bother to vote: the election has already been rigged!)

      1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

        You don’t want to do that again. Things will get real fucking bad for you.

        1. NoVaNick   9 months ago

          Well, a certain party wants there to be only two choices, ideally one. With enough information, they will soon be able to figure out who you voted for, and make your life a living hell if it wasn’t for them.

  11. middlefinger   9 months ago

    “There’s no right to free speech if there’s misinformation or hate speech” Tim Walz

    1. Eeyore   9 months ago

      Literally Hitler.

      1. Rossami   9 months ago

        No, even Hitler didn't go that far. This is literally worse than Hitler (for this one domain).

    2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   9 months ago

      Which is any speech he hates.

    3. Uncle Jay   9 months ago

      TRANSLATION: Any speech that disagrees with me is misinformation or hate speech. - Tampon Tim

  12. Eeyore   9 months ago

    Twitter, Facebook, Google, and Apple are safe because they comply and give all of the major governments backdoor access to read all of you messages and see all of your photos.

  13. Uncle Jay   9 months ago

    "Telegram CEO Pavel Durov's Arrest Is Part of a Global War on Free Speech. Governments around the world seek to suppress ideas and control communications channels."

    Somewhere in the bowels of hell, Hitler, Stalin and Mao are smiling.

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