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You cannot make it safe against criminals and open for governments.

— Pavel Durov, Founder & CEO at Telegram

Happy Thursday! Welcome back to Snippets đź‘‹

  • Telegram founder Pavel Durov's arrest in Paris, a saga that's been evolving by the hour, is our top story today.  
  • Plus, Uber ran afoul of the Dutch data protection authority to the tune of â‚¬290 million. 
  • But wait, there's more: On-the-job wearables stir privacy concerns, Musk endorses California's proposed AI bill, and governments (one in particular) are seeking more personal data.

paris affair

Telegram founder officially charged in France

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Steve Jennings/Getty Images

Days after his dramatic arrest in a Paris airport, Telegram founder Pavel Durov was questioned and then charged with a raft of crimes centered around his platform's alleged role in criminal activities.
  • French authorities charged Durov with complicity in crimes that range from managing a platform that enables illegal transactions, to spreading child pornography and drug trafficking.
  • Though France maintains the charges are not political, Durov’s arrest has drawn criticism and questions from Russia—and many are speculating whether the move threatens free speech.
  • The arrest highlights a growing trend of holding tech executives legally accountable for their platforms' content, following similar actions against leaders at X and Binance.
  • Durov’s bail was set at $5.56 million and he is required to remain within the country under judicial supervision.
TRANSCEND NEWS

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DATA TRANSFERS

Uber fined €290 million for transferring drivers’ personal data

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Getty Images

The Dutch data protection authority (DPA) fined Uber €290 million ($324m) for transferring European driver data to its US servers.
  • According to the DPA, Uber illegally transferred driver IDs, location data, transaction details, and in some cases criminal and medical records, to the company’s San Francisco headquarters.
  • Uber plans to appeal the fine, with a spokesperson calling the Dutch DPA’s decision “unjustified” and claiming the company’s "cross-border data transfer process was compliant with GDPR during a 3-year period of immense uncertainty.”
  • Cross-border data transfers to the US, while permissible under EU law, are still a legal gray area in terms of the details—with little clarity on when they require further authorization.

WEARABLES

Balancing privacy with on-the-job protection

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AP Photo/Abbie Parr

As climate change continues to drive record high temperatures across the globe, employers are equipping workers at factories, construction sites, and other labor-intensive industries with wearables meant to improve safety.
  • The devices, often watch-like arm and wrist bands, monitor heart rate, exertion level, and body temperature—looking for signs of heat-induced stress.
  • Given the absence of federal regulations mandating on-the-job protection – 986 workers have died between 1992 and 2022 – the tech has clear potential to save lives.
  • But with no guardrails on how companies collect the data or how long they can store it, labor groups worry managers could misuse the data to penalize workers for taking required breaks or cut discriminatory deals with insurance providers.

IN OTHER NEWS
  • Decoding Meta’s Privacy Aware Infrastructure.
  • Apple’s AI-driven upgrade is set to kick off.
  • Do period tracking apps compromise privacy?
  • Enterprises are spending more than ever on AI.
  • New York’s Website Privacy Controls explained.

AI LAW

Musk endorses controversial AI regulation law

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Apu Gomes/Getty Images

Elon Musk has voiced his support for California’s Senate Bill 1047, a comprehensive law that would introduce sweeping AI regulations.
  • The bill would require large AI models to submit to safety tests—a proposal the tech industry claims would place undue burden on open-source developers.
  • Senator Scott Wiener, the bill’s author, argues safety tests would protect humanity from catastrophic harms such as AI-made biological weapons.
  • Musk has been a vocal advocate of AI regulation, previously calling on labs to halt the development of super powerful models.
  • Though Grok AI recently landed Musk in hot water in the EU, his endorsement lends substantial weight to a bill that has been heavily criticized in Congress.

DATA REQUESTS

Government requests for user data are increasing

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Getty Images

According to a recent study, government requests to tech firms for user data have surged—reaching 2.2 million in 2022 alone, a nearly eightfold increase from 2013.
  • US authorities request twice as much user data as the EU, accounting for nearly 3.3 million requests over the study period.
  • Tech companies are increasingly complying with these requests, with an average annual increase of 65,000 disclosures and a global disclosure rate of around 72%.
  • With nearly nine million accounts requested in 190 countries over the study period, most requests are linked to criminal, civil, or administrative cases needing digital evidence.
TRANSCEND NEWS

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