Telegram
Becomes Free Speech Flashpoint After Founder’s Arrest
Pavel Durov,
the founder of the app, which has more than 900 million users, was taken into
custody by the French authorities.
Adam
Satariano Paul Mozur Aurelien Breeden
By Adam
Satariano Paul Mozur and
Aurelien Breeden
Adam
Satariano reported from London, Paul Mozur from Taipei, Taiwan, and Aurelien
Breeden from Sigottier, France.
Aug. 25,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/25/technology/pavel-durov-telegram-detained-france.html
Telegram,
founded in 2013 by the Russian entrepreneur Pavel Durov, has grown into one of
the world’s largest online communication tools and is central to everyday life
in countries like Russia, Ukraine and India for messaging, getting independent
news and exchanging views.
The
company’s growth — it now has more than 900 million users — has been driven
partly by a commitment to free speech. Telegram’s light oversight of what
people say or do on the platform has helped people living under authoritarian
governments communicate and organize. But it has also made the app a haven for
disinformation, far-right extremism and other harmful content.
Many were
shocked when reports emerged on Saturday across French news media that Mr.
Durov had been arrested in France on charges related to the spread of illicit
material on the service. A French judicial official, speaking on condition of
anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation, confirmed on Sunday evening that
Mr. Durov was in police custody. As word spread online over the weekend, news
of his detention became a flashpoint in a continuing debate about free speech
on the internet.
Elon Musk,
the owner of X, which has adopted a similarly hands-off approach to content
moderation, posted “#FreePavel” on his X account. “It’s 2030 in Europe and
you’re being executed for liking a meme,” he also said.
Leonid
Volkov, formerly a top adviser to Aleksei A. Navalny, the Russian opposition
leader who died in prison last year, wrote on Telegram that although the
platform had become a useful tool for criminals, Mr. Durov should be released.
“Durov is not an ‘accomplice’ to the crimes committed by Telegram users,” he
said.
The reaction
over the news of the arrest showed how concerns about free expression,
censorship and government oversight of online content are rising at a time when
regulatory scrutiny of speech on the internet around the world has ramped up.
National governments, especially those in the European Union, have intensified
pressure on companies to address disinformation, online extremism, child safety
and the spread of illicit material.
Telegram has
long been on the radar of law enforcement agencies around the world because
terrorist organizations, drug sellers, weapons dealers and far-right extremist
groups have used it for communicating, recruiting and organizing.
Mr. Durov,
39, was arrested at Le Bourget Airport near Paris after landing on a private
plane from Azerbaijan, according to French news reports. The French judicial
official said on Sunday evening that his time in custody had been extended.
Under French law, the initial 24 hours spent in custody can be extended to up
to 96 hours, depending on the seriousness of the criminal accusations.
Representatives
of the French police and Interior Ministry declined to comment.
In a
statement on Telegram on Sunday, the company said, “Telegram abides by EU
laws,” adding, “Telegram’s CEO Pavel Durov has nothing to hide.”
In an
interview on Telegram, George Lobushkin, a former press secretary for Mr. Durov
who remains close to him, wrote, “This is a monstrous attack on freedom of
speech worldwide.”
The arrest
of Mr. Durov risked intensifying tensions with Russia. The Russian Embassy in
France said in a statement on Sunday that it had asked the French authorities
for clarification on news of the arrest.
Vladislav
Davankov, the deputy speaker of the State Duma, a chamber of Russia’s
Parliament, called for Mr. Durov’s release. He said the arrest could be an
effort to gain access to information held by Telegram and “cannot be allowed,”
according to Meduza, an independent Russian news organization.
Mr. Durov,
whose net worth was estimated by Bloomberg at more than $9 billion, has largely
avoided the kind of public scrutiny faced by top executives of other large
online platforms, including Elon Musk of X, Mark Zuckerberg of Meta, Shou Chew
of TikTok and Sundar Pichai of Google.
Mr. Durov’s
arrest has little precedent. While the European Union and United States
government have summoned and questioned leaders of other social media firms,
rarely has a major tech leader been arrested over what takes place on such
sites. In 2016, the Brazilian authorities arrested a senior Facebook executive
after the company failed to turn over information from WhatsApp as part of a
drug trafficking investigation.
Of
particular interest after Mr. Durov’s reported detainment in France could be
what information Telegram would decide to share, or withhold. The French
authorities may try to force Telegram to share information with them on
criminal channels that, for instance, are used to sell firearms or coordinate
terrorist attacks. Such a move could test Telegram’s claim to its users that it
strictly safeguards their information.
A Russian
national, Mr. Durov left Russia in 2014 after he lost control of Vkontakte, the
rival to Facebook in Russia. The year before, he had founded Telegram, selling
it as an uncensored and secretive way to communicate. The company is now based
in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Mr. Durov has citizenship in France and the
U.A.E., according to Telegram.
Telegram
works as a standard messaging app, like iMessage or WhatsApp, but also hosts
channels and groups in which large numbers of people can broadcast ideas and
communicate.
Telegram’s
popularity is partly rooted in moves that it made to allow the hosting of huge
chat groups of up to 200,000 people, at a time when other social media, like
WhatsApp, were taking steps to cut back group sizes in efforts to combat
disinformation. Other functions, like the sharing of large files, no limits on
sharing links and bots that can interact with users within channels, have
helped make it a powerful tool for social organization and coordination.
Those
capabilities, combined with the app’s minimal moderation, made it a haven for
individuals and groups that were banned from other platforms like Twitter and
Facebook.
Telegram
makes money through in-app purchases, advertising, subscriptions and other
promotions. In March, Mr. Durov told The Financial Times that Telegram was
nearing profitability and considering an initial public offering.
Reports of
Mr. Durov’s arrest were immediately met with criticism by fans of the service
as an example of governments trying to censor free speech on the internet. Mr.
Durov has generally kept a low profile, not doing many media interviews. On his
personal Telegram channel, he muses about various topics, including his ascetic
lifestyle, the countries he travels to and, more recently, how as a sperm donor
he now has more than 100 biological children. On Instagram, he occasionally
posts photos of himself shirtless.
Although Mr.
Durov portrays himself as a crusader for free speech, many security experts
have said Telegram is not sufficiently encrypted. Disinformation analysts also
say that, by taking a light touch with moderation, the app has become a major
vector for the spread of terrorist propaganda and far-right extremism.
Mr. Durov
has linked the creation of Telegram to a run-in he had with Russia’s security
services, who he said broke into his apartment in an effort to force him to
take down opposition political material on Vkontakte. More recently, he
abandoned plans to issue a cryptocurrency through Telegram after scrutiny from
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
After he
left Russia in 2014, Mr. Durov said he traveled to Berlin, San Francisco,
London, Singapore and other cities before making Dubai the headquarters for
Telegram. Russia at one point tried to ban Telegram, but the company’s troubles
appeared to ease after a top company executive appeared in 2020 on a tech panel
with Russia’s prime minister.
Tucker
Carlson, the far-right talk show host who interviewed Mr. Durov this year, said
the arrest was “a living warning to any platform owner who refuses to censor
the truth at the behest of governments and intel agencies.”
Aurelien
Breeden is a reporter for The Times in Paris, covering news from France. More
about Aurelien Breeden
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