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The Vigilant Fox 🦊 (@VigilantFox)
nitter.tiekoetter.comBut what Durov revealed next pulled the lens even wider.
What happened in France, he said, is part of a larger pattern: governments exploiting legal systems to weaken privacy protections—and it’s even more extreme in the United States.
“You know what’s interesting, in the U.S., you have a process that allows the government to actually force any engineer in any tech company to implement a back door and not tell anyone about it.”
“Using this process called the gag-order, you know there are certain legal procedures.”
Carlson was stunned.
“Not tell his own employer about it?”
“Yes, exactly. If you tell your own boss, you can end up in jail. Like, gag order.”
“Actually?!”
“Yeah.”
Carlson pressed further.
“So your employees have a legal obligation to act as fifth column spies? Saboteurs against you, your employees?”
Durov didn’t hesitate.
“That’s one of the reasons I didn’t move to the U.S. with my team.”
To Durov, it’s not just a legal battle—it’s a warning.
What happened to him could happen to anyone building technology that puts privacy over power.
France may have kicked it off, but the real fight, he said, is global.
I don’t consider Pavel Durov, Tucker Carlson, or X/Twitter to be trustworthy sources of information…
…but I do find it plausible that gag orders could target individual engineers, which would be even more concerning than those targeting an organisation. If a project’s leaders don’t know about a back door, then not even a warrant canary will help.
If this is already happening in the US, what regulation or law is being used to justify it?
Id guess the ‘glock vs your family if you breathe a fucking word of this’ ruling