BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Civil society calls on Switzerland to abandon data retention proposals
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Fri, 6 Feb 2026 08:06:20 -0500
-----------------------------------------------------------
'A violation of fundamental rights' - Civil society calls on Switzerland to
abandon data retention proposals

By Chiara Castro

VPNs, messaging apps, and social media platforms could soon be forced to
collect data to help identify users

 Civil society organizations urge Switzerland to drop surveillance law
expansion
 The proposal would force VPNs, messaging apps, social media to retain more
data
 The Swiss government is in the process of revising the amendment

A coalition of 19 civil society groups has warned that Switzerland's proposal
to extend data retention requirements could violate fundamental human rights.

In an open letter published on Wednesday, organizations including Amnesty
International Switzerland, European Digital Rights (EDRi), Privacy
International, and Algorithm Watch urged lawmakers to "abandon any proposals"
for wide-ranging, blanket data retention obligations.

The proposed expansion of Swiss surveillance powers has faced significant
pushback from local politicians and privacy-focused tech firms like Proton,
NymVPN, and Threema. While these tensions recently led the Federal Parliament
to agree to a revision of the amendment, experts have told TechRadar that the
government may still look to increase data collection.

The risks of the new Swiss surveillance law

Switzerland was once considered the global gold standard for privacy, but that
reputation was challenged last year when the government proposed amending its
surveillance law, known as the Ordinance on the Surveillance of Post and
Telecommunications Traffic (VUPF).

The changes aim to extend monitoring and data collection obligations - which
currently apply to telecoms and internet service providers (ISPs) - to
"derived service providers." This broad new category includes VPN services,
messaging apps, and social media platforms.

Crucially, the proposal would force these companies to collect and store
specific metadata that could be used to identify users.

This would allow law enforcement to retroactively identify individuals behind
specific internet connections. European Digital Rights (EDRi) argues: "Such
levels of surveillance are unacceptable in a democratic society and seriously
interfere with people's rights to privacy and data protection."

In an open letter to the Swiss Federal Department of Justice and Police (FDJP),
civil society organizations argued that mass data retention is fundamentally
incompatible with European legal principles and would "severely undermine" the
confidentiality of people's private communications.

This echoes sentiments shared with TechRadar last year by Swiss-based NymVPN,
which described the expansion of surveillance as "a war against online
anonymity"

The open letter also warns that the proposed powers could create a "chilling
effect" on broader civil liberties, including freedom of speech, assembly, and
a free press.

Beyond the immediate privacy concerns, experts also raised concerns about the
law's potential to create "huge security risks" due to the increase in data
collected.  Civil societies also believe that the Swiss amendment fell short
legally, infringing both the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and EU
data protection laws.

"We recommend instead to align the Swiss legislation with the highest standards
of protection set by both the Court of Justice of the European Union and the
European Court of Human Rights," the signoatires concluded.

What's next?

Last December, the Swiss Federal Parliament accepted the motion by Council of
States member Johanna Gapany to revise the controversial March amendment. While
this effectively paused the proposal, it did not signal an end to the
government's surveillance ambitions.

Instead, Parliament confirmed it would commission an independent impact
analysis before moving forward with a revised version of the law.

EDRi told TechRadar that its open letter is a strategic move to maintain
pressure on the government during this period.  "We want to ensure the
fundamental rights impacts of such intrusive measures are centered in the
debate and not overshadowed by purely economic arguments," an EDRi spokesperson
explained.

EDRi member, the Swiss-based Digitale Gesellschaft, also told Techradar that
privacy-friendly services are being pushed out of the country due to the
ongoing revisions. Erik Schonenberger, co-founder of the group, said the
proposal "puts secure communication at risk - for example, between
journalists, lawyers, and doctors - and thereby undermines fundamental
rights."

PrivadoVPN is the first high-profile casualty of this shift. The company
recently confirmed to TechRadar that it is leaving Switzerland and relocating
to Iceland on privacy grounds.

This list may soon grow. Both NymVPN and Proton have said they would consider
leaving the country rather than compromising the anonymity of their users if
the surveillance obligations become law.


https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/a-violation-of-fundamental-r
ights-civil-society-calls-on-switzerland-to-abandon-data-retention-proposals

$$
--- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
 * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/105)

-----------------------------------------------------------
[Voltar]