Telegram reports spike in sharing user data with law enforcement


Newly released data from messaging app Telegram reveals a sharp rise in the number of data demands it fulfilled over the past year for users’ data from requesting law enforcement agencies.

The rise in fulfilled user requests comes months after French authorities arrested Telegram CEO Pavel Durov in August in part for the company’s longstanding refusal to provide user data in response to a child exploitation investigation. Soon after Durov’s arrest, Telegram appeared to relax its policy on how it handles abuse reports.

Read more…
Source: TechCrunch News


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • Cambodia: Police target growing gambling, cybercrime

    March 27, 2024

    Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior Sar Sokha has called on the National Police forces to intensify efforts in preventing and suppressing local crimes, including human trafficking, cybercrime and gambling. The appeal comes after authorities clamped down on over 500 illegal gambling sites and detained more than 1,000 people in the past six months. Sokha ...

  • YouTube ordered to reveal the identities of video viewers

    March 26, 2024

    Federal US authorities have asked Google for the names, addresses, telephone numbers, and user activity of accounts that watched certain YouTube videos, according to unsealed court documents Forbes has seen. Of those users that weren’t logged in when they watched those videos between January 1 and 8, 2023, the authorities asked for the IP addresses. The ...

  • High Court order will deliver ‘swift management’ of compensation claims by those affected by PSNI data breach

    March 24, 2024

    Claims by officers and civilian staff following a major PSNI data breach will be managed in a “swift” manner following a High Court order being granted, it has been suggested. Following the granting of a Group Litigation Order (GLO), thousands of claims by those impacted by last year’s data breach can now be dealt with, the ...

  • UK: ‘Mass surveillance’ fears over law change plans

    March 22, 2024

    The UK tech industry has deep concerns over government plans to amend a law dubbed a “snooper’s charter”. Ministers insist their changes to the Investigatory Powers Act is intended to keep UK citizens safe. But, in a statement, trade body techUK said the changes were neither balanced nor proportionate. It warns that citizens’ privacy, security and safety ...

  • Member of LockBit ransomware group sentenced to 4 years in prison

    March 14, 2024

    A dual Canadian-Russian national has been sentenced to four years in prison for his role in infecting more than 1,000 victims with the LockBit ransomware and then extorting them for tens of millions of dollars. Mikhail Vasiliev, a 33-year-old who most recently lived in Ontario, Canada, was arrested in November 2022 and charged with conspiring to ...

  • Cybercrime Atlas: International effort to disrupt cybercrime moves into operational phase

    March 14, 2024

    The Cybercrime Atlas, a massive undertaking that aims to disrupt cybercriminals across the globe, enters its operational phase in 2024, two years after organizers laid the groundwork at the RSA Conference.… Its members now include 20-plus law enforcement agencies, private-sector security companies and incident responders, financial institutions, NGOs, and academics. Over the past year, the investigations ...