Drug dealers, scammers and white nationalists openly conduct business and spread toxic speech on the platform, according to a Times analysis of more than 3.2 million Telegram messages.
Archived version: archive.ph/0UFhF
Submitted 2 months ago by BrikoX@lemmy.zip to technology@lemmy.zip
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/07/technology/telegram-crime-terrorism.html
Drug dealers, scammers and white nationalists openly conduct business and spread toxic speech on the platform, according to a Times analysis of more than 3.2 million Telegram messages.
Archived version: archive.ph/0UFhF
For a long time, Telegram has acted as if it’s above the law
What law? That the government can read and censor your private messages? Then good, and we should want it to stay that way!
There are plenty of laws that require platforms to police publically accessible content. From SMS filters, ISPs are required to have, to CSAM reporting chat platforms like Discord have to do.
Government can’t read or police E2EE messages, even if they want to. Telegram just doesn’t care about that.
They tell the imperial goons to pound sand, I like that!
JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee 2 months ago
Without a disclaimer that Telegram is a platform that anyone can use, and that is mainly used by non criminals, and policing speech in private chats is a really bad idea for privacy, it just seems like fearmongering to get people to hate Telegram, because obviously Facebook’s WhatsApp is so much better.
BrikoX@lemmy.zip 2 months ago
The comparison was uncalled-for, but Telegram earned its reputation by conscious action and not inaction. If they wanted to avoid all of this mess, they could have easily done that by enable E2EE by default. Policing Telegram’s public groups is no different from Discord servers or other centralized non-encrypted platforms.