this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2025
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In many cases this could be argued as unconstitutional.
In germany, it's not technically unconstitutional (i checked last week because i assumed it should be) but it definitely feels like it should be unconstitutional. After WW2, there was a consensus to not surveil your own population, and this is a very important constraint to keep in mind.
In Lithuania privacy is defined as a fundamental right and it includes correspondence, digital or otherwise.
Would that prevent passing laws enabling chat control? Doubt it, but I can see it as a good legal argument against it.
Where did you check that? The Vorratsdatenspeicherung has been ruled unconstitutional twice for example
Art. 10 GrundGesetz: https://dejure.org/gesetze/GG/10.html
According to the EU constitution?
According to constitutions of member states.
At least here it's worded in a way that chat control could be argued as unconstitutional (not a lawyer tho).
I would not be surprised that any other sane constitution protects privacy, and by extension digital correspondence, under fundamental rights.