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fantastic! I love hummingbirds.

it escapes you because all these treaty clauses read like safeguards, but in practice they’re just friction. Once a government decides it needs mass surveillance for ‘security,’ the law bends. The real question isn’t what the ECHR allows... it’s why people still think legal frameworks can meaningfully restrain a state that has already decided not to be restrained.

it escapes me hwo so many can be so naive.


> it’s why people still think legal frameworks can meaningfully restrain a state that has already decided not to be restrained.

The EU isn't really a state, though. The members are states, but not the EU.


As the saying goes, “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet”

EU law and its constitution have primacy.


Sort of. It's not quite like anything else. The EU has mostly trade and standardization powers, and lots of the other stuff is an outgrowth of that.

But mostly, EU law just sets a baseline, and almost all execution of it is devolved to the member states.

Edit: the EU does not have a constitution but a constitution shaped update of the Treaties. Now, lots of politicians are happy to blame the EU for unpopular stuff, but the council is the national politicians and they basically run the EU.


I'm not going down this semantic rabbit hole, which is way beside the point. :)

It's not a semantic rabbit hole, it's critically important if you want to understand how the EU works, and who actually has power.

The EU is not a state. Personally, I'd prefer a much more federal EU, but that won't happen anytime soon.


the comment thread here is obnoxiously naive, and speaks to the privilege some people having been raised under the calm of supposedly democratic societies.

you're all arguing about the syntax of rights while governments rewrite the grammar. once a state decides ubiquitous surveillance is necessary, it’ll find or fabricate a justification. the "law" doesn’t restrain power, power instructs law where to kneel.

stop treating the ECHR like some talisman that keeps the wolves at bay, as if authoritarian drift politely obeys paperwork. stop playing with this whole “actually, the loophole is X,” “no, the loophole is Y,” like you're debugging a bad API instead of staring at the obvious: when a state wants to expand surveillance, it does, and the justifications are retrofitted later, be it "public safety", or "keeping your children safe."


Let's be pragmatic about this. Chat Control and this new thing are not post-hoc rationalizations, they are attempts to justify a proposed change.

If this posited wannabe-surveillance state wanted to institute ubiquitous surveillance, it would just unilaterally do so a la PRISM. To our knowledge, they have not done this and are instead trying to rationalize the creep of surveillance somehow, which indicates that public opinion around these initiatives still matters. Public opinion is something we can all influence. Maybe discussing the legalese is a waste of time, but discussing the rhetoric and how to combat it definitely isn't


I don't think it's about public opinion so much as pushing the goalposts. The whole erosion of privacy since the 60s (maybe further but at least since then) has been a 'boiled frogs' situation.

What I think the endgame is here is to be able to do surveillance out in the open, so you can have more human resources doing it, and so you can use that surveillance legally more often. If you have a clandestine surveillance operation, you can only employ people you trust not to squeal and you have to engage in parallel construction (or resort to extralegal execution of force).

A lot easier if you can just point to a piece of paper and say "but you said we could"


across "democratic societies" around the world, they're pushing the goalposts while the elected officials are arguing for pragmatism, which inspires that servile middle of the road idealism in the voting bloc, while everybody knows that in times like these pragmatism is another form of cowardice.

Please don't mistake my post as arguing for pragmatism in the abstract.

The GGP was saying we should avoid idealistic rhetoric and focus on the pragmatics of what these governments are trying to do. I responded saying that, even if we do that, public opinion still matters.


States are not all mighty entities acting without any restriction. Wannabe rulers have to go through that kind of abstract notions to manipulate people at scale, but they have limited skills and abilities to use these tools that people about m accept only under certain conditions.

ECHR is on same ontological level as the notion of state. If no one concrete is willing to enforce it, it has zero agency.

Politicians can ignore constitutions like citizen can ignore laws. Politicians can send military forces on manifesters, and people can make politicians meet the guillotine.


> once a state decides ubiquitous surveillance is necessary, it’ll find or fabricate a justification

This is defeatist, fatalist nonsense.


> Please don't post shallow dismissals, especially of other people's work. A good critical comment teaches us something.

No, this is just being pragmatic and realizing that against a sufficiently powerful authoritarian push, legal arguments fall short. Until you address the root causes of something like Chat Control being tried again and again until it passes, any victory is just a brief respite.

You need political will to ensure freedom is respected and wanted by all. After decades of media and reactionary propaganda about crime scaremongering, it's hardly surprising that politicians are able to draft such laws with a straight face.


Alternative take: OP meant that we ought not to trust any justification for the expansion of surveillance like posted.

How?

It’s had to return. “Disguised.”

It was defeated once. It can be again. What might change that is lazy nihilism masquerading as wisdom.


I really don't see how GP's comment is lazy nihilism. There's plenty of that in this thread, but I felt GP made good points.

> don't see how GP's comment is lazy

It’s arguing why something that just happened is impossible. It’s justifying not doing anything because doing anything is pointless. Nihilism justifying laziness.


You do realize the headline matches what you just quoted?

The bravado posturing in this article is nauseating. Sure, there are a few serious points buried in there, but damn...dial it down, please.


more AI slop in the style of navel-gazing LinkedIn garbage. so nauseating. is there no escape from this? also, since when is asking clarifying questions a problem? this article is absurd.


how gpt-wrappers ate y combinator.


member of a terrorist organization? gtfo with this bullshit with your minutes old account.


> I wonder if Firefox will ever introduce any similar features.

I hope they never do. Nobody’s asking to have AI shoved down their throats, spying on them and profiling everything they do.


nice.


This looks like AI trash. Anyone who works in 3D can spot it instantly. The models are riddled with choices no sane artist would ever make, on top of churning out a grotesque polygon count that only reinforces how sloppy it is.


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