One of the guys of all time
STREAMS ON TWITCH TUESDAY AND THURSDAY(Currently on a Semi-Hiatus for Uni, Streams will be scheduled eventually and accordingly)
BREAKING:
The EU is taking four of its own members to court.
Ireland. Spain. France. The Netherlands.
For refusing to adopt the EU's cybersecurity directive.
Financial penalties on the table.
Four sovereign nations decided the law wasn't right for them.
The EU's response wasn't negotiation.
It was litigation.
This is the pattern that keeps repeating.
Poland vetoes censorship laws. Pressure follows.
Countries resist MiCA timelines. Penalties threatened.
Now four nations refuse a cybersecurity directive. Court proceedings launched.
The EU doesn't ask twice.
It sues.
The same bloc telling the world it values democracy.
Is punishing member states for exercising it.
mass surveillance is coming
> first 5 votes fail
> have another vote
> invoke technicality to require majority to vote AGAINST rather than requiring majority to vote FOR
> do it when everyone's on vacation so not enough numbers to vote against
demonic creatures
The EU now wants to be able to read your private chats directly
Not because you're suspected of a crime
Not because there's a warrant with your name on it
But because the proposal would require private messages, images, and files to be scanned for illegal content before privacy can truly exist
That's the part that should concern everyone reading this
The issue isn't just what the system is looking for today. It's the precedent it creates. Once the infrastructure exists to inspect private communications, the scope of what gets scanned can always be expanded by future legislation
History has shown that surveillance powers rarely become narrower over time, they tend to grow and become wider
End-to-end encryption has always been built on a simple promise: your conversation belongs to you and the person you're talking to. If every message must first be analyzed by software before it's allowed to remain private, then privacy is no longer the starting point, Inspection becomes the new starting point
This is much bigger than one piece of legislation
It's about redefining what private communication means in the digital age. Once governments normalize the idea that every private conversation should be subject to automated inspection, it becomes much harder to argue that any conversation is truly private at all
Bruhhhhhhhhhhh
i need to have a chat with the trainer. Martinez if i get my hands on you. HOW DO U MIS-MANAGE A TEAM WITH SUCH POTENTIAL YOU FCK. YEA WE DESERVED TO LOSE!!!!! WTF WAS THAT SECOND HALF. AND WHAT PLAYER SWAPS WERE THOSE??? FAHHHHHHHH KMS ON MINECRAFTTTTTTT
that bear is a terminator and you are liars and traitors to democracy btw
give up, we said NO to chatcontrol FOUR TIMES already, do you know the concept of CONSENT? you fucking CREEPS
There are many uses of VPNs. One of the most important is to access private networks safely for both employees and regular citizens. So this should not be allowed then?
So the EU-commission is willing to sacrifice network safety for age verification? Seriously?!?
It’s time for Chat Control to die once and for all. We’ve had enough. It has been rejected countless times already. There should be no further discussion.
BREAKING:
The EU is planning to require a passport to access the internet.
And they want to block VPNs to enforce it.
"The new age verification system cannot be bypassed via VPN."
Read that again.
A digital passport. For the internet.
Enforced by blocking the tools that protect your privacy.
This is what the trajectory looks like.
- Cash banned above €10,000.
- Bitcoin requires ID above €1,000.
- Privacy coins banned.
- MiCA eliminating 90% of crypto firms.
And now internet access tied to your identity.
With VPN circumvention specifically blocked.
Every layer of digital privacy.
Being dismantled one regulation at a time.
While America debates zero capital gains on Bitcoin.
Europe is building a system where every click, every transaction, every website visit.
Is tied to your passport.
This is not consumer protection.
This is digital authoritarianism.
And they're not hiding it anymore.