Many questions after the arrest of the CEO of a mass messaging app

Pavel Durov, founder and CEO of the popular messaging app Telegram, was arrested in Paris over the weekend. He is accused of using his platform for illegal activities such as drug trafficking and the distribution of child sexual abuse images.

Durov, who was born in Russia but spent much of his childhood in Italy, is a citizen of France, Russia, the Caribbean island nation of St. Kitts and Nevis and the United Arab Emirates. He was taken into custody at Paris-Le Bourget airport in France on Saturday after landing from Azerbaijan.

In a statement posted on its platform, Telegram said it complies with EU laws and its content moderation “meets industry standards and is constantly improving.” Durov, the company added, “has nothing to hide and travels frequently in Europe.”

Here are some details about Telegram, the app at the center of Durov's arrest.

WHAT IS TELEGRAM?

Telegram is an app that allows one-on-one conversations, group chats, and large “channels” through which users can send messages to subscribers. Unlike rivals like Meta's WhatsApp, Telegram's group chats can have up to 200,000 people logging in, while WhatsApp's maximum is 1,024. Experts have raised concerns that misinformation spreads easily in group chats of this size.

Telegram offers encryption for its communications, but contrary to a common misconception, this feature is not enabled by default. Users must enable the option to encrypt their chats. It also doesn't work for group chats. This is in contrast to competitors Signal and Facebook Messenger, where chats are end-to-end encrypted by default.

Telegram says it has more than 950 million active users. In France, the app is widely used as a messaging tool, including by some officials in the presidential palace and the ministry behind the Durov investigation. However, French investigators have also found that the app is used by Islamic extremists and drug traffickers.

Telegram was founded in 2013 by Durov and his brother Nikolai. According to Telegram, Pavel Durov supports the app “financially and ideologically, while Nikolai's contribution is technological.”

Before Telegram, Durov founded VKontakte, Russia's largest social network. The company came under pressure amid a Russian government crackdown after mass pro-democracy protests rocked Moscow in late 2011 and 2012. Durov said government authorities demanded that VKontakte shut down online communities of Russian opposition activists. The company later asked the platform to hand over the personal information of users who participated in the 2013 uprising in Ukraine that eventually ousted a pro-Kremlin president.

But Durov sold his stake in VKontakte under pressure from Russian authorities in 2014. He also left the country. Today, Telegram is based in Dubai, which Durov described in an interview with conservative talk show host Tucker Carlson in April as “the best place for a neutral platform like ours, if we want to make sure that we can protect the privacy and freedom of expression of our users.”

WHY WAS DUROV ARRESTED?

French media reported that Durov was arrested on an arrest warrant alleging that his platform was being used for money laundering, drug trafficking and other crimes. As of Monday afternoon, no charges had been filed against him and few details of the investigation were available.

On Sunday night, a French investigating judge extended Durov's arrest warrant, French media reported on Monday. Under French law, Durov can remain in custody for up to four days. After that, the judges must decide whether to press charges or release him.

WHAT WERE THE REACTIONS?

In Russia, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment on reports of Durov's arrest in France.

“We still do not know what exactly Durov is accused of,” Peskov said on Monday during his daily press conference. “We have not heard any official statements on the matter.”

“Let’s wait until the charges are announced – if they are announced,” Peskov said.

Russian government officials have expressed outrage over Durov's detention, with some calling it politically motivated and proof of the West's double standards when it comes to freedom of speech. The outcry has caused consternation among Kremlin critics: in 2018, Russian authorities themselves tried to block Telegram, but failed and lifted the ban in 2020.

Elsewhere, Elon Musk, the billionaire owner of X who describes himself as a “champion of absolute freedom of speech,” has spoken out in support of Durov, posting the hashtag “#freePavel” after the arrest.

A statement posted on the platform after his arrest said the company complies with EU laws and its moderation is “in line with industry standards and constantly improving.”

“It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner is responsible for the misuse of that platform,” Telegram's post said. “Nearly a billion users around the world use Telegram as a means of communication and as a source of important information. We await a swift resolution of this situation. Telegram is with you all.”

DOES TELEGRAM MODERATE CONTENT?

Western governments often criticize Telegram for its lack of content moderation. Experts say this could potentially open the messaging platform to abuse for money laundering, drug trafficking and the distribution of material related to the sexual exploitation of minors.

Compared to other messaging platforms, Telegram is “less secure (and) more lax in terms of policies and detection of illegal content,” said David Thiel, a Stanford University researcher who has studied the use of online platforms to exploit children at the Internet Observatory.

In addition, Telegram appears to be “fundamentally unresponsive to law enforcement requests,” Thiel said, adding that messaging service WhatsApp “filed over 1.3 million CyberTipline reports in 2023 (and) Telegram did not file a single one.”

In 2022, Germany imposed fines of 5.125 million euros ($5 million) on Telegram's operators for failing to comply with German laws. The Federal Office of Justice stated that Telegram FZ-LLC had neither created a lawful way to report illegal content nor designated an entity in Germany to receive official notifications.

Both are required under German law regulating large online platforms.

Last year, Brazil temporarily blocked Telegram because the company failed to release data on neo-Nazi activities in connection with a police investigation into school shootings in November.

In response to the arrest, Telegram said it complies with EU laws and its content moderation “meets industry standards and is constantly improving.”

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Associated Press writers Barbara Surk in Nice, France, and Daria Litvinova in Tallinn, Estonia, contributed to this article.

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