Fighting against surveillance has never been easy. But in the past year it has been specially tough in France. This talk is about shedding light on the many situations where the French State used surveillance to increase repression, mainly against activists, during the last months. Not to despair of this, but willing to provide a sincere overview to the rest of the world, La Quadrature du Net proposes to depict this situation as a satirical tale, with its own characters, plots and suspense. We want to show the political tension going on right now in France and how the checks and balances are lacking to stop this headlong rush to a surveillance state.

Looking back to France in 2023, what do we see? Implementation of new technologies such as drones, DNA marking or new generation of spywares. Also, an intensification of political surveillance, either by law enforcement deploying disproportionate means of investigations towards environmental activists or intelligence services using cameras or GPS beacons to spy on places or people that they find too radical. It was also the year of the “8 December” case, a judicial case where among other things, encrypted communications of the prosecuted persons were considered as signs of “clandestinity” that reveal criminal intentions.

On top of this, we also had to deal with the legalization of biometric surveillance for the Olympics and massive censorship of social networks when riots erupted in suburbs against police violence.

This talk is about showing the reality of the situation at stake right now in France, and how it could influence the rest of Europe. At the end, we hope to raise awareness in the international community and start thinking about how, together, we can put pressure on a country who uses its old reputation to pretend to be respectful of human rights.

Source: https://media.ccc.de/v/37c3-12309-a_year_of_surveillance_in_france_a_short_satirical_tale_by_la_quadrature_du_net

French version: https://video.lqdn.fr/w/rXmBKD6NcfxWxJEPHUZc4Z

German version: https://video.lqdn.fr/w/315ZAQFMTMG7wqiMDdGvsi

  • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    10 months ago

    I’m not faulting the French for protesting. It takes balls to do it, especially with your police. I just don’t if it helps a lot anymore. Can’t Macron just 49-3 whatever he wants and be done with it?

    Right now, the only thing I do is force everybody who really wants to talk to me to use Signal, I proselytize Linux and opensource at work and in private (save 1 person, my family is completely on linux, they have reduced their amazon usage considerably, google and facebook are more difficult to get rid of though…), I don’t vote strategically but out of conviction, I don’t buy from brands I don’t believe in (and I don’t make up excuses to do so), I’m lucky enough to live in a city where a car is unncessary, meat enters my stomach once a month or so, and that’s where I draw the line. Maybe becoming a union member will be in the books someday, maybe even protesting, but for now, becoming financially independent is the goal.

    CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

    • Snoopy@jlai.luOP
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      10 months ago

      Oh i apologize, i got completly wrong. Sorry.

      Yeah but the 49.3 is a double edged sword. It can reverse the current gouvernment, it may influence the next presidential election based om their popularity. That depend how good our memory are and if right voter are able to accept left ideas.

      Most protest are very safe. I went to several protest along the cgt. They are declared, there is a time, a path. Very safe. Some strike end badly because government decision and police repression. Most europeen country have another police system where they descalate the strike and don’t harm citizen. I read some paper and it saddened me a lot that France isn’t trying to improve that. They hurt people and never tooks the time to question their action nor apologize to the victime. And i’m worried that is fuelling the fire, it will end badly if they don’t try to build a trust system with our people. My father told me that during his time the police talk with people before any strike, they came to their meeting, they were closer to the population. I dunno how much changed today, i avoid meeting as i’m deaf.

      Pretty cool :D i haven’t succeed doing that so i gave up. I’m envious :3

      For me, i vote strategically. Let’s say there is two left candidate : I chose the most popular one because there is only two tour and they didn’t do primary election properly so we have around 5 left candidate, that’s stupid and a bad decision with the current vote system.

      Then on regional, i vote the closer to my real idea, with strategy if needed.

      Well, you can be an union member, each countries has their pro and con.