Telegram’s cofounder Pavel Durov was arrested on Saturday evening, after arriving at an airport a number of miles north of Paris in a personal jet, in keeping with French information retailers BFMTV and TF1. Each retailers report that the billionaire CEO was the topic of a French search warrant over the app’s lack of moderators, and its alleged use in drug trafficking, cash laundering, and the distribution of kid abuse materials.
To this point, neither French authorities nor Durov have put out statements on the arrest. Nevertheless, Telegram commented on X, previously Twitter, that “Durov has nothing to cover,” and Russian officers condemned the detainment as an assault on free speech. X proprietor Elon Musk additionally posted about moderation and free speech following the reviews.
A submit on Telegram’s X account mentioned the corporate “abides by EU legal guidelines” and its moderation efforts are “inside trade requirements.” The submit continued, “It’s absurd to say {that a} platform or its proprietor are answerable for abuse of that platform.”
The corporate added that it’s “awaiting a immediate decision.”
Durov was born in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) and is a naturalized citizen of France and the United Arab Emirates. Earlier than Telegram, the tech government cofounded VKontakte, Russia’s reply to Fb. Durov reportedly offered his stake in VKontakte and left Russia over state censorship calls for. Telegram is at the moment headquartered in Dubai.
In July, Durov introduced that he was a sperm donor, had “over 100 organic children,” and deliberate to “open-source [his] DNA.”
Telegram has reportedly censored content material up to now, together with Hamas channels and “public requires violence” following the assault on the U.S. Capitol. But, governments continuously conflict with Telegram over its stance on content material moderation and its use by protestors. Russia tried to dam Telegram after the agency refused at hand over encryption keys in 2018. A yr later, Durov claimed China had launched cyber assaults towards the service to suppress protests in Hong Kong. Cuba blocked the app in 2021 amid protests over the federal government’s response to Covid-19, and two years later, a Spanish courtroom briefly blocked Telegram entry following copyright complaints from native media teams.











