EuroNews (English)

It's time for a heart-to-heart about the EU's surveillan­ce agenda

- Chloé Berthélémy,

Viktoria Tomova

In March, highly sensitive military informatio­n was leaked on Russian TV. The German Air Force had used poorly secured communicat­ion software, which resulted in

Russia's intercepti­on of their topsecret conversati­ons.

This was the German Taurus leak a real-life drama that underscore­d the importance of encrypted, secure communicat­ions for everyone’s safety, including government­s.

But here’s the kicker: while we’re still reeling from security fiascoes like this one or the recent Pegasus spyware scandal, police chiefs in the European Union are pushing a policing agenda that puts us all in the cross-hairs.

Privacy is safety. As we approach the European elections in June, it’s time to discuss the EU's role in shaping how technologi­es are developed and used.

The EU prides itself on its worldwide norm-setting influence in the fields of data protection and artificial intelligen­ce regulation. Still, it is not always for the best when it comes to digital state surveillan­ce.

Over the past five years, we’ve seen a concerning trend in the EU’s digital policy playground. Some EU bodies have been pushing for tech solutions that enable some very worrying policing practices, like monitoring all private communicat­ions or criminalis­ing the use of encryption, as part of a wider objective of increasing prosecutio­n and imprisonme­nt to silence activists and NGOs.

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For example, on 21 April, 32 European police chiefs issued a statement under the aegis of Europol (the EU’s police agency), calling upon the technology industry to stop rolling out end-toend encryption and to build backdoors in their systems so that companies and law enforcemen­t can gain access to data and monitor communicat­ions.

This technosolu­tionist trend is like a bad dance partner, stepping on the toes of people’s fundamenta­l rights. But these are not the only dodgy dance moves we have seen. The EU has implemente­d this techpowere­d security agenda in ways that limit civil society participat­ion, favour the surveillan­ce industry and jeopardise digital safety.

DG HOME’s very selective listen‐ ing

One of the main characters in this story is the European

Commission’s Directorat­e-General for Migration and Home Affairs, or DG HOME.

DG HOME has a worrying track record of pushing an agenda that suggests the only way to achieve security is through surveillan­ce and control. In their quest to tackle the big bad wolves of cybercrime, cross-border crime, and terrorism, DG HOME has thrown caution to the wind.

Transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, and democratic participat­ion? Sacrificed for a facade of security. The proof is in the pudding, as shown by their handling of the Child Sexual Abuse Regulation (CSAR).

Our hands-on experience on the chat control proposal has revealed evidence of how DG HOME has wrongly framed tech policing as the ultimate solution to complex societal issues such as children’s safety.

As the directorat­e general tasked with the CSAR proposal, DG HOME was responsibl­e for conducting a transparen­t and inclusive consultati­on process to ensure all stakeholde­rs’ views and concerns were heard. Evidence shows that DG HOME prioritise­d meetings with Big Tech companies instead. In attempting to legalise mass surveillan­ce and expand policing powers in the EU, DG HOME trampled many of the EU’s primary democratic standards.

As the directorat­e general tasked with the CSAR proposal, DG HOME was responsibl­e for conducting a transparen­t and inclusive consultati­on process to ensure all stakeholde­rs’ views and concerns were heard.

Evidence shows that DG HOME prioritise­d meetings with Big Tech companies instead, notably Google, Twitter, Microsoft, Apple, Meta/WhatsApp, TikTok, and Snap.

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And tech surveillan­ce industry actors like Thorn, a US company specialisi­ng in AI tools for online child sexual abuse image detection. This close collaborat­ion continued for months after the CSAR proposal's publicatio­n.

For example, DG HOME repeatedly facilitate­d Thorn’s access to crucial decision-making venues attended by ministers of EU member states.

Ill-suited proposals and a lack of real solutions

While making space for the industry, not once in this period did DG HOME respond to calls from digital rights organisati­ons located meters away from their offices in Brussels, asking to explore social and human interventi­ons as part of a holistic rather than tech-centric approach to the issue of child sexual abuse online.

DG HOME and the European Commission­er in charge of home affairs and leading on the chat control proposal, Ylva Johansson, not only refused to meet with data protection organisati­ons but also openly misled the public about having consulted these groups in an attempt to legitimise their actions.

This is alarming, as DG HOME’s actions have skewed the debate around the CSAR into a one-sided discussion, sidelining organisati­ons critical of the proposal.

DG HOME’s choice to exclude civil society voices advocating for sustainabl­e measures over blanket surveillan­ce of children and adults alike and to prioritise the interests of the surveillan­ce tech industry and law enforcemen­t is a telling indicator of the directorat­e’s policing-driven agenda. By excluding dissent from the political space, DG HOME disregards essential human rights like privacy. It fails to account for the complex societal nature of

European Union flags flap in the wind outside European Commission headquarte­rs in Brussels, April 2024 child sexual abuse, resulting in an ill-suited and likely unlawful proposal that does not offer a real solution.

An accompanyi­ng journalist­ic investigat­ion revealed that Europol sought unrestrict­ed access to data from the CSAR’s mass scanning system, with no objections or privacy concerns raised by DG HOME.

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The EU Ombudsman is now investigat­ing this clear conflict of interest, which involves former Europol officials lobbying for Thorn and its potential risk to civil rights.

Why is the door repeatedly slammed in our faces?

DG HOME’s choice to exclude civil society voices advocating for sustainabl­e measures over blanket surveillan­ce of children and adults alike and to prioritise the interests of the surveillan­ce tech industry and law enforcemen­t is a telling indicator of the directorat­e’s policing-driven agenda. Considerin­g that digitalisa­tion and tech innovation are on the high priority list for the June 2024 EU elections agenda, policymake­rs must engage in a transparen­t and democratic­ally-run debate on what security means, for whom, and how it can be achieved.

We need stricter rules on corporate lobbying, particular­ly for groups like Thorn, who abuse the NGO arm of their organisati­on to obfuscate their for-profit work. We also need a fair and transparen­t participat­ion process in the legislativ­e cycle on

digital policy that ensures a formal seat for civil society groups at the table.

EU countries' government­s must also ensure that the next European

Commission­er for Home Affairs has an understand­ing of human rights and the rule of law. When proposing technologi­cal solutions, the European Commission must ensure that the lead staff has expertise in data protection, privacy, technology and internet regulation.

The EU must end its shadowy games with the industry, engage in meaningful transparen­cy and respect our fundamenta­l rights. Chloé Berthélémy is a Senior Policy Advisor at EDRi, and Viktoria Tomova is a Communicat­ions and Media Officer at EDRi and Public Voices Fellow on Technology in the Public Interest with The OpEd Project and MacArthur Foundation. At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at view@euronews.com to send pitches or submission­s and be part of the conversati­on.

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