France and Germany Demand Ability to Read All Messaging Apps to Fight Terrorists They Buried You With

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 23, 2016

surveillance

“The goyim are sunk down in the pit that they made: in the net which they hid their own foot is taken.” -Pslam 9:15

Oh, you silly, stupid goyim.

The net which you made on which to hide is now filled with terrorists whom you invited to live in your country.

Hide no more can you goyim on this net.

If you goyim didn’t want to have your every move monitored by ZOG, you shouldn’t have invited all of these terrorists into your base to live on welfare.

AP:

France and Germany pushed Tuesday for Europe-wide rules requiring messaging apps such as Telegram to limit encryption to help governments monitor communications among suspected extremists.

Privacy advocates argue that encryption is essential to online security, notably for banking transactions. But encrypted apps are also increasingly used by extremists to hide their location, coordinate operations and trade weapons and sex slaves.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said French authorities have detained three people this month with “clear attack plans,” but that police need better tools to monitor messaging apps the way they can tap phones. He said the three were among seven people detained with suspected links to extremist networks, without elaborating.

He and German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said they’re not pushing to ban encrypted services, but to work with companies that offer such apps or services to ensure they can’t be abused by violent extremists. They want EU leaders to discuss a Europe-wide policy controlling encryption at a summit in Bratislava, Slovakia, next month.

They don’t want to ban them, they just want to make it so they don’t function anymore.

But they didn’t elaborate on how exactly companies should limit encryption, and Cazeneuve acknowledged that his government doesn’t even have any interlocutors at some companies.

He specifically mentioned concerns about Telegram, an encrypted app used around the world. Islamic State extremists are among its many users — including a 19-year-old who attacked a Catholic church in Normandy last month and allegedly posted about his impending plans on the app.

Telegram says on its website that it blocks terrorist-related public channels, but doesn’t intervene in private chats among participants.

U.S. authorities have also pressed tech companies to work with the government against extremist activity online, with varying degrees of success.

Of course diversity makes it so you can’t have privacy.

It also makes it so you can’t have fireworks shows, music festivals or evening strolls.

In many cases, it makes it so you can’t go on living.

But this is all a small price to pay for not being called a racist by Jews.