But those are all publicly available pieces of legislation. It’s quite a leap to go from that to just assuming they’ll secretly and illegally spy on you through public wifi networks, without any law allowing them to do so. Besides, if they have no problem doing that, why would internet through your European ISP be any safer?
Bloomcole@lemmy.world 4 hours ago
Never said the rest is safer, doesn’t mean they are ‘privacy friendly’, they aren’t.
Plenty of stuff like this or this or this
And they did as much against Pegasus as they do against israel.
Some words and recommendations.
22 EU clients, at least, have acquired it.
quite a leap to go from that to just assuming they will not spy on you as a collective, more than is already ‘publicly available’.
Organisations that spy usually don’t advertise their practices.
PonyOfWar@pawb.social 4 hours ago
Again, those are all pushes for legislation. None of which are implemented at this point. The EU is, for better and for worse, a bureaucratic monster. Anything it does has to go through a long process involving multiple oversight comittees, the commission, the parliament etc. It really doesn’t have the option for much secrecy. National governments are quite a different story.