The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that laws mandating backdoors or weakened encryption violate human rights, following a case involving a Russian user of Telegram. This decision could have significant implications for EU regulations and privacy rights.
EU Court of Human Rights Rejects Encryption Backdoors: https://t.co/oU0mh3HTJS by Schneier on Security #infosec #cybersecurity #technology #news
Is the EU's digital enforcer telling the whole truth about the Brussels free speech clampdown? Source: Brussels Signal https://t.co/57BBCIXzuL https://t.co/OwngmC6w3B
Encryption backdoors violate human rights, says EU court https://t.co/DE78tCT7w5 via @computing_news
"The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that enabling governments to access everyone's encrypted messages is a human rights violation." The ever-trustworthy Russian government wanted access to people's encrypted messages on Telegram. https://t.co/u1gKsUTrqM
FYI: The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that laws requiring crippled or backdoored encryption violate the European Convention on Human Rights https://t.co/VF7XNAWCaO
Human rights court rules against backdoored end-to-end encryption https://t.co/oI3sX3f4AW
A case between a Russian user of Telegram and the government saw the ECHR rule in favour of encryption, which can have profound implications for EU rules. https://t.co/SKBqGvB3En
European human rights court rules in favour of end-to-end encryption https://t.co/0Xy0dgH75c
European Court of Human Rights declares backdoored encryption is illegal https://t.co/TS3RnIcjKH
The European Court of Human Rights rules backdoors that weaken E2EE violate human rights law, after Russia began requiring Telegram to decrypt messages in 2017 (@ashleynbelanger / Ars Technica) https://t.co/Ok3OPq9AYI https://t.co/Kg2Ql5lWED
Backdoors That Let Cops Decrypt Messages Violate Human Rights, EU Court Says https://t.co/NoIkMHn8E4