Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity,
Telegram
founder Pavel Durov told the Freedom Forum audience in Oslo that
Western societies have already struck the iceberg and started sinking -
yet most citizens remain in their cabins, convinced the ship of personal
freedoms is unsinkable.

His
remarks arrive precisely as Keir Starmer's government rams through a
social media ban for under-16s that functions as the perfect pretext for
mandatory digital ID, device-level scanning on every phone, and the
practical elimination of anonymous speech online.
The policy is
dressed in the familiar language of child protection. In practice it
requires every major platform to verify ages with facial scans,
passports or credit card data. What starts as a restriction on minors
rapidly becomes a national system of internet passports.
Encrypted
messaging apps currently sit outside the ban, but the same Online
Safety Act framework already contains the levers to demand backdoors
later. Tech executives who refuse to turn every smartphone into a
government scanner face up to five years in prison.
Durov drew on
two decades running major platforms and direct experience with state
pressure in Russia, the EU and France. The core message was
unmistakable.
"Our
ship has already hit the iceberg. We have already started to sink
without even realizing it. And I'm talking about the ship of our
personal freedoms."
He
continued, "Passengers of the Titanic actually didn't want to leave the
ship for almost two hours after it hit the iceberg. People thought the
Titanic was unsinkable. Lifeboats left half empty."
"Only in the
last half an hour people started to panic, but by that time it was
already too late. Not enough lifeboats, nowhere to hide, nowhere to
run," Durov stressed.
He then turned to concrete examples. In the
United Kingdom, thousands of people are arrested each year over social
media posts. In Germany, posting something politically incorrect can
mean fines or prison time. Durov described how "child protection"
rhetoric short-circuits debate.
"Once somebody says child
protection, all of a sudden it triggers very ancient, very deep parts of
our brain. Who would be against protecting children? It completely
bypasses logic. It bypasses debate. It bypasses rationality," he
explained.
"All of a sudden, people are ready to give up
everything. And authoritarian regimes were able to smuggle all kinds of
repressive legislation under the guise of protecting children," he
added.
He
recounted Russia's failed attempt to ban Telegram. Authorities blocked
the app, yet 95 percent of Russian teenagers still used it every month -
many via VPNs that exposed them to far more fringe and illegal content
than the original platform ever hosted.
The pattern repeats wherever governments claim they must control speech to save the children.
Starmer
announced the under-16 social media ban as a way to "give children
their childhoods back." The accompanying rules demand age verification
across Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, X and more.
Additional
restrictions hit livestreaming, stranger messaging in games, and impose
curfews and scroll limits for under-18s. Regulations are meant to be in
force before Christmas 2026, with full enforcement by April 2027.
The
machinery does not stop at apps. A parallel device-level system using
"nudity detection" and monitoring is already scheduled for rollout by
major phone makers this September.
If companies drag their feet,
legislation will make client-side scanning mandatory. The phone itself
becomes the gatekeeper - before any message is encrypted or sent.
Big
Brother Watch put it plainly: this is population-wide ID checks for
everyone who wants to use a phone, tablet or laptop. The government that
has repeatedly failed to protect children from grooming gangs and
ideological capture in schools now positions itself as the only body
qualified to decide what counts as safe online."
"Its
own evidence review found only a small correlation between social media
use and wellbeing - no proven causal harm. That finding has been buried
while the infrastructure races forward," the organisation added.
The
coercion extends to corporate leadership. Draft rules under the Online
Safety Act would impose up to five years in prison on tech executives
whose companies refuse to build and deploy scanners that inspect every
photo, video and message on user devices before encryption.
Client-side
scanning turns personal phones into always-on surveillance endpoints.
Privacy advocates note the "child safety" framing masks the broader
project: making every smartphone a mandatory informant for the state.
Encrypted
messaging services such as Signal remain exempt from the current social
media ban. That exemption is fragile. The same Online Safety Act that
created the age-verification regime already contains provisions that can
later demand access to private communications. Signal has not stayed
silent.
The company's leadership has made clear it will not
implement dystopian combinations of age verification and content
scanning that "will not safeguard children" and "endanger us all."
Recent
statements indicate Signal is prepared to stop providing services in
the UK rather than compromise the encryption its users rely on.
The
warnings expose the surveillance agenda hiding behind child-protection
language. Once the verification and scanning infrastructure exists,
expanding it to messaging apps becomes a regulatory tweak rather than
fresh legislation.
YouTube warned that blanket bans simply push
young people toward anonymous, less safe corners of the internet and
away from curated educational content. Meta argued against forcing users
to hand over ID to dozens of separate services and floated the idea of
device-level or app-store age checks instead.
These responses
reveal both resistance to fragmented compliance and the companies' own
interest in centralised systems they can control.
The underlying
trend remains the same: the open, pseudonymous internet is being
replaced by a permissioned version that requires state-approved
identity.
Starmer has been branded authoritarian for good reason.
The ban arrives alongside documented overreach: more than 80,000 arrests
for social media posts in recent years, selective enforcement that
appears to spare ideologically aligned platforms, and a broader project
of tying smartphone access to digital ID.
There is a high chance
Starmer will be out of office by year's end, replaced by his own party -
yet the machinery he is building will outlast him.
The
UK version accelerates a global pattern already visible in Canada,
Australia and the EU. Each jurisdiction uses slightly different pretexts
while constructing the same core capability: verified digital identity
standing between citizens and the open internet.
Once every post,
search, message and transaction requires state-linked identity, dissent
that was previously difficult to police at scale becomes routine
administrative action. An entire generation will grow up treating
constant surveillance as normal.
History shows these systems are
never limited to their initial stated purpose. The technology now being
embedded will serve whatever purpose future governments assign it.
Durov's
warning from Oslo remains the clearest summary. The ship has already
hit the iceberg. The only question is how many passengers will still be
below decks when the water reaches their cabins.