Chat Control is back, two weeks after the EU's previous attempt

Back-from-the-dead message scanner sparks fury—‘mass snooping’ fears and a blame war

TLDR: The EU’s “Chat Control” plan is back, aiming to scan private messages and photos for all citizens. Commenters erupted: some call it mass snooping and urge calling MEPs, others say blame conservative parties—not “the EU”—and push for a privacy-rights law to stop these repeat attempts.

It’s baaaack: the controversial EU plan nicknamed “Chat Control” has resurfaced just weeks after a previous defeat, and the comments section lit up like a group chat at 3 a.m. The proposal would allow automatic scanning of everyone’s private messages and photos—even encrypted ones—sparking mass snooping panic and doomsday talk about privacy for 450 million people. One user dropped a practical lifeline, linking to the European Parliament site and urging readers to call their representatives—cue a flurry of ‘ring your MEP’ energy.

Then the blame game exploded. Some insisted it’s not “the EU” pushing this, but conservative parties, with one commenter reminding everyone the Parliament shot it down last time. Others sounded resigned, asking if lawmakers will just keep re-submitting it “until it’s a yes.” One particularly spicy take accused backers of waiting for bigger headlines to distract the public—‘they never quit,’ they warned—turning the thread into a mini political thriller.

Amid the chaos, a thoughtful pivot gained traction: why not pass a right to private communications so these proposals can’t keep coming back? Jokes flew too—memes about “DMs with a chaperone” and “no means try again” summed up the mood. Bottom line: fear, fury, and a demand for a privacy bill of rights—all fighting for space in your DMs.

Key Points

  • The article claims a renewed EU “Chat Control” proposal would legalize scanning of private digital communications.
  • The stated scope includes messages, photos, and files, even if encrypted.
  • The scanning is described as automatic and performed without user consent or suspicion.
  • The article asserts this would constitute mass surveillance affecting all EU citizens.
  • Readers are urged to contact MEPs to oppose the proposal and support digital privacy.

Hottest takes

"Framing this as the EU's attempt is antieuropean propaganda" — vrganj
"So they will pass it until is a yes?" — leugim
"a bill enshrining a right to private communications" — derefr
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