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Here's how the EU's plan to tackle online child abuse could impact your privacy

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Privacy activists are sounding the alarm over the European Commission's plans to clamp down on online child abuse, warning that it would usher in "mass surveillan­ce" in the bloc.

The EU executive's Better Inter net for Kids strategy, unveiled on Wednesday is calling for stronger safeguards to protect children from harmful content online or from being preyed upon.

Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President for a Europe fit for the Digital Age, assured in a statement that the strategy is "in line with our core values and digital principles" while her colleague, Commission­er for Internal Market Thierry Breton, stressed that the EU now "call upon industry to play its part in creating a safe, age-appropriat­e digital environmen­t for children in respect of EU rules."

Niels Van Paemel, policy advi-sor at Child Focus Belgium, told Euronews that the NGO is "very pleased that the Commission is taking the fight against CSAM, Child Sexual Abuse Material, to the next level."

"It's great that right now we see industry, that they are being reminded of their responsibi­lities. We are moving away from voluntary action, that's how it was in the past but that didn't work. Now social media platforms are forced to proactivel­y look for reports and remove possible exploitati­on," he explained.

Problemati­c content they de-tect will then be flagged to a soonto-be-created EU expertise centre as well as national authoritie­s, which Van Paemel said would make the fight against CSAM more transparen­t as well as enhance cooperatio­n between member states' organisati­ons and law enforcemen­t.

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'Clearly undermines endto-end encryption'

But privacy rights experts or activists are much more critical of the Commission's plan which obliges companies to service providers to detect, report and remove child sexual abuse when it was previously done on a voluntary basis.

It also demands that they monitor encrypted content. Endto-end encryption enables only the sender and reader of a communicat­ion to access its content. Tech companies, including Meta - the parent company of Facebook - and Apple, have for years resisted authoritie­s' demand they create so-called backdoors to encrypted services.

But Commission argues that "if such services were to be exempt from requiremen­ts to protect children and to take action against the circulatio­n of child sexual abuse images and videos via their services, the consequenc­es would be severe for children."

For Zach Meyers, Senior Re-search Fellow at the Centre for European Reform (CER) think tank, the Commission's plan "clearly undermines end-to-end encryption."

"Once a “backdoor” to under-mine encryption exists, that will create both new security vulnerabil­ities for hackers, and inevitable political pressure to expand the “backdoor” so that it covers more than just child sexual abuse material ( CSAM) over time," Meyers added.

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This could lead to some com-panies shelving end-to-end encrypted services altogether in order to comply with the EU's legislatio­n.

It is also a bit of a head-scratch-er for industry players as the bloc is expected to soon give the final green light on two important pieces of legislatio­n -- the Digital Markets Act and Digital Services Act -- which will, in part, regulate tech companies' access and use of personal data.

The EU parliament has throughout the negotiatio­ns with the EU Council on these two key pieces of legislatio­n insisted that end-to-end encryption be protected.

Then, there is the fact that de-tecting grooming is much harder to do than spotting harmful images and videos, which can largely be done with artificial intelligen­ce tools.

According to Meyers, "detect-ing “grooming” can only be effectivel­y undertaken by scanning texts between individual­s. A high degree of human interventi­on is necessary because understand­ing the context, and whether the recipient of the messages is a child, is critical."

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'EU would become a world leader in generalise­d surveillan­ce'

Interinsti­tutional negotiatio­ns on these proposals are likely to focus heavily on these two issues.

German MEP and civil rights ac-tivist Dr. Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party) has decried the legislatio­n as a "mass surveillan­ce plan" and a "spying attack on our private messages and photos by error-prone algorithms" which he described as "a giant step towards a Chinesesty­le surveillan­ce state."

“Organised child porn rings don’t use email or messenger services, but darknet forums. With its plans to break secure encryption, the EU Commission is putting the overall security of our private communicat­ions and public networks, trade secrets and state secrets at risk to please short-term surveillan­ce desires. Opening the door to foreign intelligen­ce services and hackers is completely irresponsi­ble," he added in a statement.

He argued to Euronews that "when it comes to private communicat­ions, it must be limited to suspects and require a judicial order" and flagged that "the hash database [in which known child abuse material is stored] currently used for matching is so flawed that up to 86% of reports are not even criminally relevant."

A collective of 35 civil society organisati­ons had already urged the Commission, back in March, when the proposal was originally meant to be unveiled before being twice-delayed, to "ensure that people’s private communicat­ions do not become collateral damage".

The European Digital Rights (EDRi), one of the signatorie­s of the statement, added that "this law would make the EU a world leader in the generalise­d surveillan­ce of whole population­s". They also emitted doubt as to whether it would actually make much of a difference in tackling the disseminat­ion of child abuse material.

"Real criminals can easily cir-cumvent this legislatio­n by just moving to self-hosted messengers, the dark web or other jurisdicti­on," Thomas Lohninger, Executive Director of epicenter.works and Vice-President of EDRi, told Euronews on Wednesday.

"The only ones whose mes-sages will in the end be surveilled are normal European citizens, journalist­s, doctors, lawyers and whistleblo­wers. If this proposal goes through, the days in which the EU was leading on data protection are over," he added.

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Europe is CSAM hub

The Commission has sought to brush aside these concerns. Commission­er for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson argued to Euronews that the bloc's executive has "listened to those concerns" around privacy.

"We have set up every clear safeguards," she said so that "detection will only be allowed when there is a detection order, and there needs to be a prior consultati­on with the data protection authoritie­s".

In its communicat­ion, the Com-mission also said that it is closely working with industry, civil society organisati­ons, and academia to "support research that identifies technical solutions to scale up and feasibly and lawfully be implemente­d by companies to detect child sexual abuse in end-to-end encrypted electronic communicat­ions in full respect of fundamenta­l rights."

Time is now of the essence for the EU institutio­ns to find compromise­s as a temporary law allowing tech companies to voluntaril­y scan their users' content to report CSAM is due to expire in six months. Failure to strike a deal would mean online platforms would no longer have a legal basis to carry out this work and may choose to stop rather than risk being exposed to legal proceeding­s.

According to a report to the In-ternal Watch Foundation's annual report, published last month, there were 252,194 URLs (webpages) confirmed last year as containing child sexual abuse imagery having links to the imagery or advertisin­g it — 64% increase from 2020.

The European region account-ed for 72% of the reports assessed by the NGO.

 ?? ?? Mobile phone app logos for, from left, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.
Mobile phone app logos for, from left, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.

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