Telegram to drop ‘people nearby’ feature and improve moderation
Pavel Durov
says feature – which has had issues with bots and scammers – will be replaced
Dan Milmo
and Pjotr Sauer
Fri 6 Sep
2024 12.25 EDT
The chief
executive of Telegram, Pavel Durov, has announced the messaging app will
improve moderation on the platform and has removed some features that have been
used for illegal activity.
The app’s
founder unveiled the changes on Friday hours after calling his arrest by the
French authorities last month “misguided”. Durov has since been charged with
allegedly allowing criminal activity on the app.
In a post on
X, he said the messaging app was “committed to turn moderation on Telegram from
an area of criticism into one of praise”.
The changes
announced by Durov included removing the app’s “people nearby” feature, which
he said had “issues with bots and scammers”, and replacing it with “businesses
nearby”, featuring legitimate businesses; and disabling media uploads on the
app’s blogging tool, Telegraph, which Durov said was being “misused by
anonymous actors”.
The Verge, a
tech news site, also reported that Telegram has removed references on its FAQ
page to private chats being protected and that requests to moderate them would
not be processed. A spokesperson told the site that the app’s source code had
not changed but users could report a new chat to moderators.
Durov added
that Telegram’s nearly 1 billion users had been let down by a minority.
The
39-year-old, who was born in Russia and also holds French citizenship, was
detained in France in August as part of an investigation into crimes related to
child sexual abuse images, drug trafficking and fraudulent transactions
associated with the app.
“While
99.999% of Telegram users have nothing to do with crime, the 0.001% involved in
illicit activities create a bad image for the entire platform, putting the
interests of our almost billion users at risk,” he said.
Durov added
that Telegram had reached 10 million paid subscribers.
Durov made
the post on X after he used his Telegram channel to make his first public
comments since his detention last month. He called his arrest “misguided” and
denied any suggestion the app was an “anarchic paradise”.
Durov said
the investigation into the app was surprising in that the French authorities
had access to a “hot line” he had helped set up and could have contacted
Telegram’s EU representative at any time.
“If a
country is unhappy with an internet service, the established practice is to
start a legal action against the service itself,” he wrote. “Using laws from
the pre-smartphone era to charge a CEO with crimes committed by third parties
on the platform he manages is a misguided approach.”
He added:
“But the claims in some media that Telegram is some sort of anarchic paradise
are absolutely untrue. We take down millions of harmful posts and channels
every day.”
Durov, who
is worth $9bn, avoided being held in jail before the case was heard with €5m
bail. He was granted release on condition that he reports to a police station
twice a week and remains in France.
On Friday,
Moscow officials confirmed previous reports that Durov had declined offers of
diplomatic assistance from Russia after the arrest.
Maria
Zakharova, spokesperson for the Russian foreign ministry, said that Russian
diplomats in Paris had taken all “necessary actions” regarding Durov’s
detention, but he had declined any offers of diplomatic help.
“For any
questions about Durov’s decisions on which side he prioritises in this matter,
please contact his lawyers,” Zakharova told the RTVI outlet.
Durov also
holds Emirati and Saint Kitts and Nevis citizenship.
His arrest
has escalated tensions between Russia and France, with some lawmakers in Moscow
claiming that Paris was attempting to pressure the Telegram founder into
handing over the app’s encryption keys to western intelligence agencies.
Earlier this
week, Vladimir Putin expressed surprise over France’s actions against Durov,
calling them “selective in nature”. In his first public comments on Durov since
the arrest, the Russian president said he had met the Telegram founder only
once, “years ago”, and they had not stayed in contact.
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