Telegram’s founder, Pavel Durov, has made a stunning claim. According to him, the U.S. government pressures tech engineers to install backdoors in software—without informing their employers. This revelation, shared in an interview, has ignited concerns about privacy, surveillance, and the unseen forces shaping digital security.
Durov explained that when he visited the U.S., cybersecurity agents attempted to secretly recruit one of his engineers. Their goal? To persuade him to integrate specific open-source tools into Telegram’s code, tools that Durov believes would serve as backdoors. If true, this raises serious questions about the extent of government influence over private technology.
This isn’t just about Telegram. The U.S. has legal mechanisms that allow secret surveillance orders. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) enables authorities to demand access to encrypted data while forbidding companies from disclosing these requests. National Security Letters (NSLs) operate similarly, compelling individuals to cooperate with investigations in silence.
Sources
https://www.newsweek.com/telegram-tucker-carlson-government-spying-1891398
https://nishani.in/backdoor-by-law-how-the-u-s-turns-tech-engineers-into-silent-spies/