Europes digital sovereignty at stake Europe's privacy-first tech unites against Chat Control
Date:
Tue, 07 Oct 2025 13:36:46 +0000
Description:
A week ahead of a crucial meeting, over 40 firms are urging lawmakers that digital sovereignty cannot be achieved if Europe undermines the security and integrity of its businesses.
FULL STORY
The European Union needs to protect privacy, trust, and encryption if it
wants to safeguard the future of the bloc's digital sovereignty and lead in
the global digital economy.
This is the warning coming from Europe's privacy-first tech sector, which is urging lawmakers to reject the controversial Child Sexual Abuse Regulation (CSAR) bill.
Over 40 companies have signed an open letter today, October 7, a week ahead
of a crucial meeting set for October 14. Signatories include some of the best VPN and encrypted messaging services, such as Proton, NordVPN , Tuta , and Element .
Nicknamed Chat Control, the initiative seeks to introduce an obligation for
all messaging apps operating in Europe to scan all URLs, pictures, and videos shared by their users in the lookout for child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The latest iteration of the proposal, which the Danish Presidency put forward last July, has never been closer to reaching an agreement .
Crucially, this mandatory scanning is expected to occur directly on the
device and, in the case of encrypted apps, before messages are encrypted. A requirement that, according to experts, clashes with how encryption works and could ultimately lead to weakened security for all.
Europe's digital economy at stake
The risk of breaking encryption has been the primary objection to the
proposal since the beginning.
Encryption is responsible for keeping communications private and secure by scrambling the content of users' messages into an unreadable form and preventing unauthorized access.
In the face of a rise in cyberattacks, worldwide authorities have been increasingly recognizing the importance of this technology. In the open
letter to the EU, experts explain that measures such as the Cyber Resilience Act and the Cybersecurity Act stress the importance of encryption as
essential to Europe's future.
"It is incoherent for Europe to invest in cybersecurity with one hand, while legislating against it with the other," reads the open letter . "To lead in
the global digital economy, the EU must protect privacy, trust, and encryption."
European tech companies are especially worried about the future of the bloc's digital sovereignty, which they believe is essential to guaranteeing Europe's independence from US and Chinese tech giants, as well as strong national security.
Technologists, cryptographers, and digital rights campaigners have long
argued that this client-side scanning would create a backdoor into secure communications that hostile government or other malicious actors would also
be able to exploit.
That's exactly the reason why the Danish proposal exempts all government and military accounts from mandatory CSAM scanning. An exemption that the signatories believe is not enough to protect national security.
They said: "A lot of sensitive information from businesses, politicians, and citizens will be at risk should the CSA Regulation move forward. It will
weaken Europes ability to protect its critical infrastructure, its companies, and its people."
This is why businesses joined forces to urge lawmakers to reject any measure "that would force the implementation of client-side scanning, backdoors, or mass surveillance of private communications," in favor of proportionate child protection measures.
Decisive moments
With only a few days left ahead of the next crucial meeting, Germany
continues to leave Chat Control's critics worried.
The country is considered a decisive vote. Yet, the government has recently shifted positions , passing from the opposition to the undecided list again, according to the latest data .
Now, according to Patrick Breyer , former MEP for the German Pirate Party and digital rights jurist, the CSU-led Federal Ministry of the Interior is attempting to force the German Federal Ministry of Justice (SPD) to approve
the controversial EU chat control by today (October 7).
Germany-based encrypted email service, Tuta, has confirmed to TechRadar that German ministers (interior and justice) are meeting today to finalize the country's position as the Ministry of Interior is trying to convince Justice
to agree to Chat Control.
"The digital outcry about this is pretty loud in Germany right now, adding
the SME open letter, we could actually have a chance that Germany stands firm with its pro-privacy position that it had in the past," Tuta told TechRadar.
This also adds to the pledge coming from Meredith Whittaker , President of
the non-profit Signal Foundation, urging all German citizens to "let German politicians know how harmful, counterproductive, and self-sabotaging their reversal would be." ======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/europes-digital-sovereignty -at-stake-europes-privacy-first-tech-unites-against-chat-control
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