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The charges against Pavel Durov increases pressure on Brussels to enforce new
European law on the platform
The surprise arrest of the Russian-born co-founder of Telegram, Pavel Durov,
after he stepped off his private jet in Paris last Saturday night, has brought
the one-time fringe social network under the glare of the spotlight like never
before.
Durov’s arrest – after an investigation by the Paris prosecutor into organised
crime, child sex abuse images, fraud and money laundering on the platform – also
raises the stakes for the European Union, which has adopted the world’s most
ambitious laws to police the internet, notably the Digital Services Act (DSA).
Coming into force in November 2022, the DSA targets online platforms “too big to
care” – in the words of the EU commissioner, Thierry Breton – putting demands on
internet firms to remove illegal content, protect children, tackle
disinformation and other online harms.
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