• Proton VPN has hit back at Canada’s proposed Bill C-22

• The proposed legislation could require VPNs to log user metadata

• NordVPN and Windscribe have also slammed the bill

    • XLE@piefed.social
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      8 hours ago

      Can we at least agree that Proton should stop misleading activists on their homepage?

      I’m learning so much about you leftists.

      • Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus
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        7 hours ago

        Switzerland has strong legal protections for individual rights, and in fact the Swiss Federal Constitution(new window) explicitly establishes a constitutional right to privacy. (In the US, this right is merely implied.) Specifically, Article 13 safeguards privacy in personal or family life and within one’s home, and the Swiss Civil Code(new window) translates this right into statutory law in Article 28.

        In the US and EU, authorities can issue gag orders to prevent an individual from knowing they are being investigated or under surveillance. While this type of order also exists in Switzerland, the prosecutors have an obligation to notify the target of surveillance, and the target has an opportunity to appeal in court. In Switzerland, there are no such things as national security letters, and all surveillance requests must go through the courts. Warrantless surveillance, like that practiced in the US where the FBI conducts 3.4 million searches per year(new window) with little oversight, is illegal and not permitted in Switzerland.

        Switzerland also benefits from a unique legal provision with Article 271 of the Swiss Criminal Code(new window), which forbids any Swiss company from assisting foreign law enforcement, under threat of criminal penalty. While Switzerland is party to certain international legal assistance agreements, all requests under such agreements must hold up under Swiss law, which has much stricter privacy provisions. All foreign requests are assessed by the Swiss government, which generally does not assist requests from countries with poor rule of law or lack an independent judiciary.

        I do not see even ONE misleading statement here.

        ETA: This has nothing to do with my political stance. It is simply the reality of the world we live in. If you found a company, you have the option to choose which country you base your business in - but you don’t have the luxury of defining your own legal code.

        • XLE@piefed.social
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          7 hours ago

          Have you heard of lying by omission? You, or one of your leftist friends, said a ton about how Swiss law also binds them to give up private data. Funny that’s missing here.

          It’s also missing the fact they are looking to relocate out of Switzerland.

          Switzerland also benefits from a unique legal provision with Article 271 of the Swiss Criminal Code(new window), which forbids any Swiss company from assisting foreign law enforcement, under threat of criminal penalty

          Really makes you think.

          • Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus
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            4 hours ago

            Dude, you really should read more. Just because you do not understand what it written does not mean someone is lying. Mic drop.