Overview
- Law enforcement experts and member‑state representatives meet today, with the Danish presidency aiming to push the proposal to an EU Council vote by 14 October.
- The compromise draft says encryption may continue but would oblige services to deploy vetted on‑device technologies and AI to detect known and new CSAM before messages are encrypted.
- Positions remain split, with about 15 countries in support, six undecided and six opposed; France, Italy, Spain and Sweden back the plan, while Belgium, Poland, Finland and the Czech Republic dissent, and Germany is undecided.
- More than 500 cryptographers and security researchers signed an open letter calling the measures technically unworkable, warning of high false‑positive rates and new vulnerabilities that could be exploited by hackers or hostile states.
- Technology firms including WhatsApp, Signal and Tuta Mail object, with Signal previously saying it would exit the EU rather than weaken encryption and Tuta vowing to sue if the rules are adopted.