Share.

    10 commenti

    1. UndulatingHedgehog on

      Short-sighted and therefore a waste of both resources and credibility.

    2. anders_hansson on

      I think the article is a bit vague.

      >The task of the steering group is to evaluate and present positions on key solutions for the revision of Article 10 of the Constitution […] The Constitutional Affairs Committee of the Parliament has called on the Government to examine the need for reform of the protection of domestic peace and the protection of confidential communications.

      I.e. they are considering reforming Article 10 and the rights to confidential communications. But in what way?

      >According to Article 10 of the Constitution, everyone’s private life, honor and domestic peace are protected. According to the law, the secrecy of letters, telephone calls and other confidential messages is also inviolable.

      It sounds like Article 10 is very strong in terms of protecting civilian’s privacy. So any reform would likely be weakening privacy rights?

      That would be bad.

    3. Cold_Casey23 on

      Ahh yess Finland the greatest nation in the entire world doing whatever the greatest nation in the world does. At this point I’m begging at Russia to liberate us from whatever the privacy nightmare is this

    4. dont_say_Good on

      do none of these idiots realize its going to impact *everyone,* you can’t put in back doors for only the “good guys”, that’s not how it works

    5. djingo_dango on

      European countries going to break mathematics using the power of legislation! Primer numbers larger than 50 decimal digits will be illegal

    6. IntelligentClam on

      All the cyber criminals are rubbing their hands for this.

    7. OnIySmellz on

      Smacks to me like the EU is just another authoritarian elite super state.

    8. Russia must be eagerly waiting for backdoored encryption within EU. It will be a free-for-all bonanza for anyone wanting to spy EU companies and citizens.

    9. Shnorkylutyun on

      Some famous bloke once mentioned, don’t judge laws by their best or expected effect, but judge them by imagining the worst consequences they could have.

      Why, Finland?

      It’s not like you are a centre for pedophiles.

    Leave A Reply