SHARE
COPY LINK

TECH

Spanish judge halts suspension of Telegram

A Spanish judge on Monday reversed course and halted his controversial order to temporarily suspend messaging app Telegram in the country pending a police report on the company.

Spanish judge halts suspension of Telegram
Photo: AFP.

Judge Santiago Pedraz of Spain’s High Court, which handles sensitive cases, on Friday ordered a “temporary suspension” of Telegram after media companies
complained it was violating their intellectual property rights by allowing users to upload their content without permission.

Consumer rights group Facua criticised the ruling as disproportionate, warning it would cause “enormous damage” to millions of users of the platform, and the app has continued to operate in Spain.

“It is as if they shut down the internet because there are websites that illegally host content protected by copyright,” said Facua general secretary Ruben Sanchez.

READ ALSO: Spanish judge orders nationwide suspension of Telegram

But on Monday the judge halted his order to suspend the service pending a police report on the platform and “the impact the temporary suspension could have on users”, the court said.

Telegram is an encrypted messaging platform that also allows users to set up their own channels to broadcast content.

Pedraz issued the suspension order after officials in the Virgin Islands, where Telegram is registered as a business, failed to respond to a July 2023 court request for information.

The media companies — which Facua named as Mediaset, Atresmedia, Movistar and Egeda — complained their material was being used on Telegram without their consent.

The court wanted information that would allow it to identify who was behind the accounts in question.

In Friday’s order, the judge said it was the lack of cooperation from the Virgin Islands that had led him to take this “precautionary measure”.

The order met the principles of “necessity, appropriateness and proportionality”, he added.

“No other measure exists that can stop a repeat of the actions denounced,” he argued.

Telegram says it has 700 million monthly active users across the world.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

TECH

Spain’s broadband customers to be left without internet as fibre takes over

On Friday April 19th Spain will begin its total migration from ADSL to fibre optic, a measure which will leave 440,000 households in 7,440 municipalities across the country without internet. 

Spain's broadband customers to be left without internet as fibre takes over

Spain is bidding farewell to broadband internet as it officially and completely moves over to fibre optic internet.

According to Spain’s National Markets and Competition Commission (CNMC), there are still 440,000 ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) connections in use in Spain.

The technology was launched in the early 2000s and brought the internet to millions of Spanish homes and businesses, but in recent years it has fallen into disuse due to the relentless advance of fibre optic internet, which offers a more stable and faster internet connection. 

The gradual closure of Spain’s 8,526 copper exchanges, the material that allows ADSL connections in Spain, means that those who haven’t made the changeover already will be left without internet access soon.

Telefónica, which owns Movistar, will start cutting off its ADSL services on April 19th, Vodafone will do so in June and Orange is in the process of notifying its broadband customers. 

Most ADSL users have already been notified via text message, letter, email and fax, but there are still 7,440 municipalities across Spain, mostly rural ones, where broadband is still the primary source of internet.

Most of these are located in Castilla y León (38 percent); Castilla La Mancha (12 percent); the Valencia region (10 percent); Andalusia and Catalonia (9 percent); Madrid and La Rioja (5 percent); Cantabria and Galicia (3 percent), the Canary Islands, Asturias and the Balearic Islands (2 percent) and Murcia (1 percent).

“If you have contracted a copper product with any operator and your home is under the umbrella of one of the plants affected by the closure, you will have to switch to an alternative offer, probably with fibre or radio,” the CNMC has warned. 

“Your new installation will be completely free and you will also be able to keep your current phone number.”

Movistar has assured its broadband customers that if fibre optic internet isn’t an option for them, it will offer satellite or radio frequency internet access to them. 

Affected ADSL users should contact their service providers as soon as possible.

SHOW COMMENTS