TELEGRAM FOUNDER
PAVEL DUROV TURNS 41
AND WARNS: 'WE ARE RUNNING OUT OF TIME'
I'm turning 41, but I don't feel like celebrating. Our generation is running out of time to save the free Internet built for us by our fathers.
What was once the promise of the free exchange of information is being turned into the ultimate tool of control.
Once-free countries are introducing dystopian measures such as digital IDs (UK), online age checks (Australia), and mass scanning of private messages (EU).
Germany is persecuting anyone who dares to criticize officials on the Internet. The UK is imprisoning thousands for their tweets. France is criminally investigating tech leaders who defend freedom and privacy.
A dark, dystopian world is approaching fast - while we're asleep. Our generation risks going down in history as the last one that had freedoms - and allowed them to be taken away.
We've been fed a lie.
We've been made to believe that the greatest fight of our generation is to destroy everything our forefathers left us: tradition, privacy, sovereignty, the free market, and free speech.
By betraying the legacy of our ancestors, we've set ourselves on a path toward self-destruction - moral, intellectual, economic, and ultimately biological.
So no, I'm not going to celebrate today. I'm running out of time. We are running out of time.
- Pavel Durov, Telegram founder
Via X
Thread
Login to reply
Replies (7)
πππ
Yes we are.
If you donβt have privacy you donβt have freedom
Nothing else needs to be understood
Bring Durov to Nostr!
Lets purplepill @durov
View quoted note β
I can sense his frustration and a plea. π₯Ί
right now we are very close to the concept that I was designing a few years ago, in which each person, instead of uploading their content to a central server, one will have their own server where one can upload their content without depending on third-party servers. but yes, there is still a lack of development in making publications and messages more private, since by simply revealing the IP address one can already be detected