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๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK & ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australia have the worst anti-encryption laws among democratic countries.
๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Canada risks joining them with Bill C-2.
๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ US still relies on secret orders under FISA & CLOUD Act.
๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ Switzerland is no longer the privacy paradise it was claimed to be.

#Encryption is under attack worldwide. Our new global overview shows why Europe remains the best place for encrypted services.

โžก๏ธ Check the global overview:
tuta.com/blog/encryption-legisโ€ฆ

#PrivacyMatters

in reply to Tuta

worldwide (only included the Westยฎ๏ธโ„ข๏ธ)
This entry was edited (18 hours ago)
in reply to Tuta

people should start selfhosting as much as possible and go outside of the online world to experience some privacy.. although that is under attack as well.
in reply to Tuta

Convince trump that encryption protects pedophiles, and the USA will magically become better protected.
in reply to Tuta

To fix this map, in Europe we will go from 'best' to 'worst' with #ChatControl...

Well, not if UK ends up with their spyware thing, what the hell is going on there?

in reply to Tuta

sadly the US laws when you export software (out of US and Canada) are a lot more stringent with a max length of 64 key... which makes little sense if exporting to countries not linked to hell, like china, russia etc and harms the US as software therefore can't be sold on the playstore for Europe etc
in reply to Tuta

Definitely, Tuta improves its product every day, and after open-sourcing it has become even more reliable. However, I think you run too many ads attacking alternatives that share some of your values โ€” it comes across like badmouthing a colleague, and people donโ€™t respond well to that. Right now Tuta offers encryption and security features that are unparalleled in the industry; in my opinion, that alone is the key selling point.IMHO
in reply to Tuta

Putting Switzerland in a worse position than "EU" seems far fetched to me. Is the statement: "Switzerland is no longer the privacy paradise it was claimed to be." your only source of making it "orange" on your map?

There is a great risk that "Chat Control" will be applied in EU. Whats "green" about that?

There has to be worse threats to Switzerland regulations that "Chat control" then. Could you please enlighten me...

in reply to Tuta

There are no explicit prohibitive laws in Russia, but the laws are "flexible" and interpreted as convenient, and there is also a widely used method of cryptographic hacking called "cryptorectal interrogation". I would give it a red.
in reply to Boozook ๐Ÿฆ€

you're right about the red color. but thereร re many laws that prohibit many things. not just encryption but many other things. and many people are behind bars for such "criminal" cases. so this is a very bloody red color.
This entry was edited (8 hours ago)
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