Settings

Theme

Cloudflare CEO on the Italy fines

twitter.com

656 points by sidcool 21 days ago · 1125 comments · 1 min read

Reader

https://xcancel.com/eastdakota/status/2009654937303896492

https://torrentfreak.com/italy-fines-cloudflare-e14-million-...

alanfranz 21 days ago

Italian here.

If somebody wants to read the full document about the fine (in italian) it's here: https://www.agcom.it/sites/default/files/provvedimenti/delib...

Part of this doc states:

``` The rights holders also declared, under their own responsibility, providing certified documentary evidence of the current nature of the unlawful conduct, that the reported domain names and IP addresses were unequivocally intended to infringe the copyright and related rights of the audiovisual works relating to live broadcast sporting events and similar events covered by the reports. ```

So, I'm not sure anybody verified that what the right holders claimed was actually true. While I understand what AGCOM (the italian FCC, more-or-less) is trying to do, it seems that, as usual, a law was created without verifying how the implementation of such law would work in practice (something very common in Italy), and this is the result.

Cloudflare CEO seems irate, and some of his references are not great, but I'd be inclined at thinking he's got at least _some_ reason on his side.

  • enricotal 20 days ago

    Also another Italian here. For context, the "Piracy Shield" mentioned in the order is basically a legislative hacksaw authorized by the regulator (AGCOM) primarily to protect Serie A football rights. Soccer rules Italy more than the Vatican..

    It’s a mess technically: it mandates ISPs and DNS providers to block IPs/domains within 30 minutes of a report, with zero judicial oversight. It’s infamous locally for false positives—it has previously taken down Google Drive nodes and random legitimate CDNs just because they shared an IP with a pirate stream.

    The NUCLEAR threat regarding the 2026 Winter Olympics (Milano-Cortina) is the real leverage here. He’s bypassing the regulator and putting a gun to the government’s head regarding national prestige and infrastructure security.

    My personal take idea likely outcome: Cloudflare wins.

    EU Law: The order almost certainly violates the Digital Services Act (DSA) regarding general monitoring obligations and country-of-origin principles. Realpolitik: The Italian government can't risk the Olympics infrastructure getting DDoS'd into oblivion because AGCOM picked a fight they can't win. They will likely settle for a standard, court-ordered geo-block down the road, but the idea of Cloudflare integrating with a broken 30-minute takedown API is dead on arrival.

    • ta9000 20 days ago

      > The NUCLEAR threat regarding the 2026 Winter Olympics (Milano-Cortina) is the real leverage here. He’s bypassing the regulator and putting a gun to the government’s head regarding national prestige and infrastructure security.

      Kind of wild that a private company has that kind of power, both in terms of being one of the few that can offer this service and they can make threats at this level.

      • gpm 20 days ago

        I have to say I'm curious over whether that's actually leverage or a massively miscalculated threat that is just going to push the Italian population and politicians firmly against cloudflare.

        I'm pretty sure if you tried that here (Canada) it would do the latter.

        • DangitBobby 20 days ago

          Would a regulating body in Canada do this, though? And if so, hopefully Cloudflare would say fuck you just the same as they did Italy. It's nice to see someone actually taking a principled stand for once.

          • gpm 20 days ago

            If our politicians were stupid enough to pass a law telling them to - I sure hope so - we live in a place with the rule of law not the rule of whatever Joe at the CRTC thinks should happen. Regulators exist to enforce the will of parliament...

            Would our politicians pass a law this unfortunate... I hope not... but I don't really have that much faith in them. The current government probably wouldn't, but governments change.

            Referencing the Trump administration - the people going around threatening, deporting, arresting, taking money from, etc people as a consequence for speech they don't like - as the standard for free speech makes this far from a principled stand by cloudflare. They took their moral high ground and sunk it. This isn't about speech for them, just money.

            • DangitBobby 20 days ago

              You're free to believe all that. "Rule of Law" loses all meaning when corruption takes root. We don't like that "for my friends, everything, for everyone else, the law" shit.

              Things can be morally wrong and still legal, and the law itself can intentionally enforce immorality. It's your civic duty to determine when upholding the law degrades you and every else more than following it does.

              Also I feel like threatening to take your toys and go home when they don't play fair is a totally valid response.

              • gpm 20 days ago

                "for my friends, everything, for everyone else, the law" is a weird description, when that's not the problem with this law at all. There's no question of selective enforcement going on here. The problem is lack of due process, not that.

                It's a great description of one of the main tactics the administration he is asking for help uses though. Which again goes to Cloudflare entirely abandoning the moral high ground here.

                Threatening to leave is "totally valid" in that it's their right to leave, but it's also not something that a sovereign country that cares about staying sovereign should give any respect to. The only response to a foreign corporation saying that that maintains your independence is "you can't quit, you're fired." Otherwise you just become beholden to the corporation providing you "charity".

              • atmosx 20 days ago

                > It's your civic duty to determine when upholding the law degrades you and every else more than following it does.

                That’s a lot more complicated. What happens if a foreign power takes over Canada and changes the law? What is the state law goes against the laws stated by your religion?

                It’s a thin line, better not deal in absolutes.

                • eecc 20 days ago

                  If a foreign power takes over your country and changes the laws in ways that conflict with the previous constitution, there’s a break in sovereignty continuity so your options are: 1. Pledge to the new authority and move on 2. Keep your word on your previous pledge and resist

        • petre 20 days ago

          Not a fan of Cloudfare but why should it be responsible for providing pro bono services to the Italian government during the winter olympics?

          If one gets drunk at the pub and threatens the staff after being served free drinks, they get thrown out. Why should this be any different?

          In Spain they also have similar laws made specifically for UEFA and the broadcasters' mafia.

          • yorwba 20 days ago

            The services aren't pro bono if they're only offered in exchange for getting a law modified.

            And if you offer people free stuff and then turn around and demand something in return, they're going to get upset and like you less than if you had never offered the free stuff in the first place.

            • toyg 19 days ago

              There was no exchange implied... before this sentence. Cloudflare might well be justified in feeling that the other side altered the deal, so to speak.

        • anakaine 20 days ago

          I have to doubt that it would push the populace against the company when the company is actually both providing good (free protection, DDOS mitigation, CyberSec) and supporting appropriate judicial process to make decisions.

          • gpm 20 days ago

            Political threats of withdrawing from an event in an explicit attempt to pressure the country is the opposite of supporting appropriate judicial process.

            • tonyhart7 20 days ago

              so you want cloudflare to pay fines that 2x revenue of italy customer while also demand cloudflare for services it provides ?????

              not counting that the fines also outrageous, 2% global revenue and IP+Domain block for global despite it only Italy request it ????

            • concinds 20 days ago

              Is this some weird variant of the right-wing claim that freedom of association is “censorship”? Why would a government be entitled to free shit?

              • tsimionescu 20 days ago

                No one is entitled to free shit, but anyone who says "I'll stop giving you free shit unless you do X" is not giving you free shit, they're engaging in barter. And bartering to try to change a law, just like paying to change a law, is obvious and illegal corruption.

        • rerdavies 20 days ago

          Pretty sure, speaking as a Canadian, that the Canadian government would not be able to implement that kind of legislation. And that if they did, I would 100% back Cloudflare.

      • asa400 20 days ago

        This is one of the consequences of outsourcing this (and other capabilities) to the private sector.

        Many governments simply don’t have the skill and political will to invest in these kinds of capabilities, which puts them at the mercy of private actors that do. Not saying this is good or bad, just trying to describe it as I see it.

        • miki123211 20 days ago

          Governments just can't come to grips with how much money software engineers make.

          Paying a contractor $x million? Yeah no problem, projects are projects, they cost what they cost. Does that $x million pay for 5x fewer people than it would in construction or road repair? We don't know, we don't care, this is the best bid we got for the requirements, and in line with what similar IT projects cost us before.

          Paying a junior employee $100k? "We can't do that, the agency director has worked here for 40 years, and he doesn't make that much."

          Variants of this story exist in practically every single country. You can make it work with lower salaries through patriotism, but software engineers in general are one of the less patriotic professions out there, so this isn't too easy to do.

          • tsimionescu 20 days ago

            > Paying a junior employee $100k? "We can't do that, the agency director has worked here for 40 years, and he doesn't make that much."

            I can assure you that junior software engineers in Italy or anywhere else in the EU make nowhere near that amount of money. In fact, few of even the most senior software engineers make that amount of money anywhere in the EU (in Switzerland or the UK they might see such salaries, at the higher tiers).

            • sehansen 16 days ago

              Maybe not junior engineers, but it's quite common to make more than $100k in Denmark nowadays. According to the Danish Society of Engineers[0], the median salary for a CS Bachelor graduating in 2025 was 51 000 DKK / month, which is $95 000 USD / year. The average raise received by a privately employed Danish engineer was 5% last year[1], so you'd expect to reach $100k with two years experience.

              And, to support miki123211's point, the Danish government has had continuing problems hiring software engineers for the past decade, leading to a number of IT scandals.

              0: https://studerende.ida.dk/english/about-to-graduate/salary/s... 1: https://ida.dk/om-ida/nyt-fra-ida/solide-loenstigninger-til-...

            • alberto-m 19 days ago

              > in Switzerland they might see such salaries, at the higher tiers

              Putting UK and Switzerland in the same pot is wrong, the pay scales are totally different. 100k$ is 80k CHF which is entry level salary for a SWE. The difference between Switzerland and US is at senior level (reaching 160k CHF is much more difficult than reaching 200k$).

            • miki123211 20 days ago

              The figures I gave were in-line with the US (as that's what most of this audience understands), but if you scale everything by a certain factor, the entire principle holds basically anywhere.

              • tsimionescu 19 days ago

                Not really. US programming salaries are much higher than most other engineering and specialist positions, which makes it harder for the government to hire good programmers.

                However, programming salaries here in the EU are much more in line with other specialist salaries, which the government already hires many of. So there is no significant problem in hiring programmers at competitive rates for government work. The bigger problem, and the reason this doesn't usually happen, is just ideological opposition to state services, preferring to contract out this type of work instead of building IT infrastructure in-house.

            • Nextgrid 20 days ago

              And they get exactly what they pay for. There's zero reason for a competent professional to stick around with that kind of pay any longer than strictly necessary (aka until their own gig or freelancing takes off).

              • angry_octet 20 days ago

                Many people don't want to live in America. I know that if you're American that sounds crazy.

          • Nextgrid 20 days ago

            Not just governments, that same kind of greed exists in private companies too.

            The only way to make good money while being an employee is to have your buddy spin up a "vendor" offering overpriced bullshit and shill it within your company. In exchange, you also spin up a "vendor" and your buddy shills it at his company.

            • Imustaskforhelp 20 days ago

              This might explain why there are sooooooooo many vps providers/cloud providers, this might be one valid reason as to why.

              I am sure that this might not be the only reason but still, its a valid reason for many. Do you know of companies/people which do this and how widespread this practise is?

              To me it still feels like malicious compliance tho for what its worth.

              • Nextgrid 20 days ago

                I said this in jest as a reaction to what post-tax SWE salaries in Europe top out at, all while the same companies have no problem burning insane money on vendors. There is zero incentive to do good work as an employee as it won't be compensated anywhere near what even a shoddy vendor gets paid.

                But given the rise of many SaaSes selling exactly the same thing every full-stack web framework used to provide for free - think Auth0, Okta, etc, it may very well be happening.

          • debugnik 20 days ago

            > Paying a junior employee $100k?

            In Southern Europe? More like $30k gross.

      • jkman 20 days ago

        How is revoking pro bono work you volunteered 'wild'? Should offering services lock you into indentured servitude?

        • account42 18 days ago

          There is a difference of stopping a free service (for whatever reason) and threatening to stop a free service if the other party doesn't do what they want.

      • isodev 20 days ago

        > Kind of wild that a private company has that kind of power

        Also kind of wild that it’s a private US company pushing their current political views on another sovereign state. Cloudflare as a political tool of leverage is a level of dystopia we really should try not to unlock.

        • nl 20 days ago

          What are the exact political views the Cloudflare is pushing here?

          That it is unreasonable for Italian soccer rights owners to try to use Cloudflare to enforce their broadcast restrictions with 30 minutes notice?

          That it is unreasonable not to have a appeal right for these restrictions?

          That the technical solution demanded is technically infeasible?

          Not sure that these are political views at all.

        • johncolanduoni 20 days ago

          They're threatening to take their ball and go home. If they move all of their operations out of Italy, under what principle does Italy demand they block content globally? Should Wikipedia remove their page on Tiananmen Square because the Chinese government demands it (which they would, if they thought it would work)?

        • msh 20 days ago

          i think it’s quite normal and always have been normal for companies to leave countries when the regulative environment goes against them.

          • account42 18 days ago

            Most of them are not as brazen as putting "change your laws or here is how we will fuck you over" in a tweet.

        • SkiFire13 20 days ago

          I can assure you that a lot of Italians agree with Cloudflare on this topic.

          • iamkonstantin 20 days ago

            I think the parent is trying to say that whatever issues Italy may have internally, it's not up to Cloudflare to comment or enact solutions on their own.

        • staplers 20 days ago

            a private US company pushing their current political views on another sovereign state
          
          This has always been the case in the western world, even before America itself existed. Some use the US govt (CIA) as leverage but often will just do it themselves.
        • davidguetta 18 days ago

          They push nothing, they push back on retarded decision. Italy is not even a real market for them

    • atmosx 20 days ago

      > but the idea of Cloudflare integrating with a broken 30-minute takedown API is dead on arrival.

      Why? Technically it’s very easy. Wha if JDV asked CloudFlare to implement this on a different occasion? Would it be dead on arrival?

    • Nextgrid 20 days ago

      A system like this could actually work as long as every takedown request involves posting a significant bond into a holding account and where the publisher can challenge the block and claim the bond if the block is ruled illegal.

      This achieves the advantages of quick blocking while deterring bad behavior, and provides cost-effective recourse for publishers that get blocked, since the bond would cover the legal fees of challenging the block (lawyers can take those cases on contingency and get paid on recovery of the bond).

      • mercutio2 19 days ago

        This is one of the very few non-money-laundering use cases for crypto.

        I would support a “5 cents per unsolicited email” email system, in a similar way. If you make it a mildly enjoyable $5/hour task to read the first sentence or two of your spam folder, the overall internet would be better.

    • torginus 20 days ago

      I don't get how censorship of this kind is even technically feasible?

      I can rent a vpn on AWS, then connect to a stream hosted in Kazakhstan. You can't take down a website there, and you certainly can't rangeban AWS ips.

    • xinayder 20 days ago

      Italy can also buy the bluff and you know, partner with an EU company to provide them the service Cloudflare would offer "for free".

      • pyvpx 20 days ago

        There is no “EU” company with remotely the same network capacity or capability, in general

        • xinayder 20 days ago

          BunnyCDN is a good contender for the network. They can find another provider for cybersec.

          • lgeek 20 days ago

            BunnyCDN don't run their own network, most of their servers are hosted at DataPacket(.com), but they use some other hosting companies too.

            DataPacket has a very large network though and is kind of, sort of EU-based. AFAIK most operations are in Czechia, but the company is registered in UK. And there's also the Luxembourg-based Gcore.

    • immibis 20 days ago

      Can someone report a bunch of government websites and legal streaming services and see what happens?

  • easyThrowaway 20 days ago

    I just want to point out that AGCOM once decided to put out an "Economically Relevant Instagram Influencers Register".

    They're not really... let's say, 'on the ball' for understanding how the internet works. It's a bit of a running joke in Italy that their decisions are often anachronistic or completely misunderstanding of the actual technology behind the scenes.

    And for the most part they just deliberate, they have no direct judicial authority. They ask an administrative judge to operate on their decisions, which brings us to some of the favourite sentences for any italian lawyer: the... "Ricorso al TAR". ("appeal to the Regional Administrative Court", which is a polite way to say "You messed up, badly and repeatedly, and now we have to spend an eternity trying to sort this out in a court room").

    • spicyjpeg 20 days ago

      If we truly want to point out the ridiculousness of Italian tech regulations, the influencers' registry, the temporary ChatGPT ban from a few years back or even the new AI regulations cannot hold a candle to the 22-year-old war on... arcade games.

      A poorly written regulation from 2003 basically lumped together all gaming machines in a public setting with gambling, resulting in extremely onerous source code and server auditing requirements for any arcade cabinet connected to the internet (the law even goes as far as to specify that the code shall be delivered on CD-ROMs and compile on specific outdated Windows versions) as well as other certification burdens for new offline games and conversions of existing machines. Every Italian arcade has remained more or less frozen in time ever since, with the occasional addition of games modded to state on the title screen that they are a completely different cabinet (such as the infamous "Dance Dance Revolution NAOMI Universal") in an attempt to get around the certification requirements.

      • badsectoracula 20 days ago

        I guess they were inspired by a very similar law in Greece from 2002[0] where in an attempt to outlaw illegal gambling done in arcades a poorly written law outlawed all games (the article mentions it was in was in public places but IIRC the law was for both public and private and the government pinky promised that they'll only act on public places). I remember reading that some internet cafes were raided by the police too :-P.

        [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_3037/2002

      • dfxm12 20 days ago

        An arcade stuck in the early 00s would be my ideal third space though.

        • UltraSane 20 days ago

          Have you seen Arcade Time Capsule? It is very accurate recreation of a classic arcade with games you can actually play if you provide the ROMs.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LOtkGN138Q

          • jjmarr 20 days ago

            Not the OP, but I tried it when it came out. VR headset technology wasn't good enough for screens within screens and it was nauseating more than anything.

            There's also impedance mismatch between using the headset controllers and the physical ones in the game. Ideally, I should be able to use my own fightstick in an augmented reality configuration.

            • UltraSane 20 days ago

              The quest 3 is good enough and the Galaxy XR is incredibly high resolution. But it isn't a really ideal way to play arcade ROMs for long term but just to enjoy the nostalgia.

              • jjmarr 20 days ago

                How is the Galaxy XR? I want one but I can't justify it if it doesn't connect to my non-Samsung work laptop.

                • UltraSane 20 days ago

                  I got it for $75 a month for two years. Visual clarity is incredible and monitor replacement level but comfort is meh so I bought studioform creative head strap which helped a lot. You can use Virtual Desktop to connect to any computer easily.

                  I'm a sysadmin so I bought it to see if it would work when I want to ssh into systems I'm physically near in racks. It has worked really well for this.

      • maartenscholl 20 days ago
  • torginus 20 days ago

    We live and have lived in a technological civilization for more than a hundred years. Legislators have NO EXCUSE to hide behind 'we don't understand the technology'. Sure computers are complex. But so are nuclear reactors, combustion engines and food safety.

    If nuclear reactors cost 3x what they should, yet safety incidents occur 2x as often as they could because of stupid legislation, they shouldn't be able to hide behind 'we only have a legal diploma so we can't figure out what actuall works'.

    For some reason, a lot of older folks consider computing as a 'low stakes game', as computers being either an annoyance or convenience but nothing more.

    I don't know if the system is fundamentally flawed, and the people in charge are becoming less and less able to actually handle the reins of society and some major upheaval is necessary, or the system can be fixed as is, but this seems endemic and something should be done.

  • tjwebbnorfolk 20 days ago

    > a law was created without verifying how the implementation of such law would work in practice (something very common in Italy)

    To be fair to Italy, this happens everywhere quite frequently. In my country (the US) we do this all too often.

    • falaki 20 days ago

      Except that in the common law system of the United States, a judge can throw out the regulation.

      • arlort 20 days ago

        That's very much not the difference between common and civil law

        If the law is constitutional it can't be thrown out by a judge in common law and if it's not it can be declared so in civil law

        The difference between the two is more about what happens in the absence of a law

  • bobmcnamara 20 days ago

    > So, I'm not sure anybody verified that what the right holders claimed was actually true.

    Yup, this will be weaponized by the MPAA/RIAA

  • tomp 20 days ago

    Wait, so is this about censorship, or about copyright?

    If the latter, I don't see why CloudFlare is complaining about "global" censorship. The US would simply seize the domains (which they have done so many times before), but I guess Italy doesn't have that power...

    • subsistence234 20 days ago

      There's no accountability or due process. According to this brilliant law, if some crony with write-privilege adds your website to a list, the whole world has to ban your website within 30 minutes no questions asked.

      • j-krieger 20 days ago

        Germany has an equivalent within the CUII, which is also a censorship branch of the government with no judicial oversight.

        • nkmnz 20 days ago

          There is no such thing as "no judicial oversight" in Germany.

          • riedel 20 days ago

            Judicial oversight took a while in Germany, but it is there now (but I guess you will always find an incompetent judge if you really want). I wonder if cloudflare would implement the German blocklist now that we have judicial oversight. Currently it is as nice registry for pirating sites for anyone using 1.1.1.1 [1]

            [1] https://cuiiliste.de/domains

          • ceejayoz 20 days ago

            That overstates things somewhat.

            https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llglrd/2019...

            > To some extent, judges are subordinated to a cabinet minister, and in most instances this is a minister of justice of either the federation or of one of the states. In Germany, the administration of justice, including the personnel matters of judges, is viewed as a function of the executive branch of government, even though it is carried out at the court level by the president of a court, and for the lower courts, there is an intermediate level of supervision through the president of a higher court. Ultimately, a cabinet minister is the top of this administrative structure. The supervision of judges includes appointment, promotion and discipline. Despite this involvement of the executive branch in the administration of justice, it appears that the independence of the German judiciary in making decisions from the bench is guaranteed through constitutional principles, statutory remedies, and institutional traditions that have been observed in the past fifty years. At times, however, the tensions inherent in this organizational framework become noticeable and allegations of undue executive influence are made.

            • nkmnz 20 days ago

              You're completely on the wrong track here. The discussion is not about who does or doesn't control the courts, it's about the question if someone who's rights have been violated can go to court or not with regard to that specific matter. If a court rules that blocking an IP address is illegal, the access provider has to stop blocking it. Period.

          • j-krieger 20 days ago

            The CUII does not need a verdict to enact censorship. Make of that what you will.

            • jacquesm 20 days ago

              The police doesn't need a verdict to issue you a fine either. But you can challenge your fine (and your block) in court.

              • SkiFire13 20 days ago

                A fine doesn't cause immediate harm as you don't have to immediately pay it while you challenge it in court, having your IP or website blocked happens immediately and will continue harming you until it's decreted that it wasn't lawful.

                • jacquesm 19 days ago

                  That depends on the country you are in. In some countries you have to pay anyway and then you get it back if you win the court case. And they're banking on you not challenging the fine because the fees for the court case will exceed the fine so you lose either way.

              • bonzini 20 days ago

                Challenging the IP bans in Italy is stupidly hard. Your VM gets an IP address that was used a few months ago for soccer piracy? Too bad, you won't be able to access it from Italy.

              • nkmnz 20 days ago

                1. CCUI isn't even a government body

                2. parent comment is wrong, CCUI is requiring court action by their members before they act.

                3. I rather have companies competing under market pressure to find solutions to topics like copyright infringement than the German state (once again) creating massive surveillance laws and technical infrastructure for their enforcement in -house.

                • j-krieger 20 days ago

                  2 is wrong. The CUII even blocks political activists because they dare to post their entire blocklist [1]

                  [1]: https://lina.sh/blog/telefonica-sabotages-me

                  • waffleiron 20 days ago

                    Read the post, they never blocked the activist. They just changed what they replied to a DNS query of an already blocked site to make it harder to detect.

                  • nkmnz 20 days ago

                    1. Article you've shared is from 2025-02-26 2. New rules have been in place from 2025-07 3. The author hasn't been blocked at all. You're either a liar or you cannot read.

              • j-krieger 20 days ago

                Are you really countering an argument against censorship by a power abusing entity with another group famous for power abuse?

    • yibg 20 days ago

      Sometimes it's hard to differentiate between the 2. In this case it sounds like copyright in name but the implementation is such that it's a big hammer that can also be used for censorship if followed.

    • wmf 20 days ago

      It's about copyright. Seizing domain names (registered outside Italy of course) can't be done in 30 minutes which is what the football overlords want.

      • t0mas88 20 days ago

        What is it with Southern Europe and the football overlords? Spain is blocking half the internet, Italy is fighting Cloudflare. What's up? Are football leagues big political donors?

        • nathanlied 20 days ago

          Football is extremely popular, and football clubs (and their owners) are quite influential (socially and politically). But it's a little bigger than that.

          EU is pushing for measures against live-event piracy[1], because they frame this as a systemic threat to cultural/economic systems, giving national regulators broad cover to act aggressively.

          While football is quite huge in Europe at large, the impact to GDP of these broadcasting rights is sub-1%; however, lobbyists have a disproportionate impact: you have the leagues themselves (LaLiga and Serie A for Spain and Italy respectively), you have the football clubs, and you've got broadcasters. Combined, they swing quite high, even if the actual capital in play is much lower than the total they represent.

          Add to this politicians who can frame these measures as "protecting our culture", get kickbacks in the form of free tickets to high profile games, see rapid action because blocks are immediately felt and very visible, and incentives for increased funding from regulatory agencies because "we need the budget to create the systems to coordinate this", and you can see how the whole system can push this way, even if it is a largely blunt instrument with massive collateral damage.

          [1] - https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=intcom%3...

          • miohtama 20 days ago

            Football, the clubs, are also major driver of money laundering. Dirty cash buys a lot of politicians.

            https://www.comsuregroup.com/news/a-red-card-for-dirty-money...

            • miki123211 20 days ago

              Yeah, in Europe, there tends to be an association between football fans and organized crime, just as there's one between unions and organized crime in the US.

              The kind of hooligans who love beating up the hooligans from the other team are also perfect from beating up the hooligans from the opposing drug cartel.

            • hexbin010 20 days ago

              A company that would profit from more regulations arguing for more regulations. No way !

        • kaoD 20 days ago

          As usual, cronyism.

          In Spain's case Telefonica (largest telecom, used to be state owned) is private but has a large State participation and the government literally appointed the latest CEO.

          Guess who sells the largest football games as part of their expensive TV package?

          Guess who asked a judge to order the other telecoms to also block Cloudflare IPs?

          • mlrtime 20 days ago

            If this is true, and seems likely. There is some satisfaction seeing corrupt cronyism agencies getting slapped with a hard "NO" when they are used to getting what they want.

        • HDThoreaun 20 days ago

          Spain especially but southern europe in general has a really crappy economy. Soccer teams are some of the wealthiest organizations in these countries, which means theyre the ones who are able to fund politicians which means they can get laws passed.

        • Fire-Dragon-DoL 20 days ago

          No usually the political figures are football league owners.

          Jokes aside, I don't know, the obsession with soccer is extreme in Italy. For people who don't care about soccer like I did, there is so much you have to endure just "because of soccer"

        • immibis 20 days ago

          Those football leagues are run by the literal Mafia

  • heraldgeezer 20 days ago

    >as usual, a law was created without verifying how the implementation of such law would work in practice (something very common in Italy), and this is the result.

    This is everywhere.

    The reason is you DONT want a law to be too detailed with tech mumbo jombo. If too detailed, it will get outdated. See that USA crypto wars ban in the 90s.

  • rtpg 20 days ago

    So is this similar to the DCMA in the US, where there's a lot of iffyness about abuse and actually knowing that someone is actually a rights holder?

    • SkiFire13 20 days ago

      At least with DMCA you so get a notice and you can somewhat challenge it. With Italy's Piracy Shield you have no notice and there's no public record of which IPs/websited have been blocked, so it's hard to even challenge it in court.

      • Nextgrid 20 days ago

        Nothing prevents anyone from sending in a fake notice anonymously, which will still force any provider to take down your content until challenged.

    • mlrtime 20 days ago

      Not really, this is at a World level. Italy wants to ban an IP globally in 30 minutes.

      DMCA take downs are domain specific with one provider. So scale is completely different here.

  • kelvinjps10 20 days ago

    Is this similar to what happened in Spain?

    • ShowalkKama 20 days ago

      yes, it's quite similar. They blocked some lawful services too such as google drive (yes, really) and a TON of sites behind cloudflare by blocking some of its IPs (it happened a while ago, it's not directly related to this).

      • paganel 20 days ago

        It's in a way related because this is also meant to combat "football streaming piracy", the same as in Spain. Idiot moves.

  • qsort 20 days ago

    Also Italian. I think everybody sucks here?

    Most Italian authorities like this one are chock full of incompetents, and I'm almost sure they're just caving in to some soccer broadcaster or some crap like that. He might very well be fully correct on the fact of the matter.

    Still, the rhetoric of the post is frankly disgusting. No, I'm not taking lessons in democracy from JD Vance, thank you very much. No, I don't think that might makes right and it's unsurprising that those who believe otherwise are so eager to transparently suck up to this administration.

    Making public threats in this way is just vice signaling, nice bait.

    • NamlchakKhandro 20 days ago

      But might does make rights.

      Because all it takes is men with guns to change what rights you think you have.

      If you can't defend yourself against that then you have no rights.

      • burkaman 20 days ago

        This is the Stephen Miller caveman view of the world, but it obviously doesn't make sense if you think about it for more than five seconds. It's a very straightforward consequence of refusing to ever admit you are wrong. "If I did it, then I must have had the right to do it."

        It's just a refusal to accept the philosophical concept of rights. The right to vote doesn't exist because you didn't have to defeat the entire army to vote against their leader, it's just that the leader benevolently decided to let you vote against them. You don't have the right to life, it's just that everyone on the planet with a weapon has coincidentally decided not to murder you, for now. Laws don't actually exist. Any right that appeared to be established against the wishes of the men with guns (i.e. all of them) was actually fake or an inexplicable accident. You can imagine a world that works like this, but it certainly isn't our world. No historical period or even any fictional story I can think of operates like this.

        • pixl97 20 days ago

          > The right to vote doesn't exist because you didn't have to defeat the entire army to vote against their leader,

          I would say you're wrong. The right to vote does exist because men rose up together and fought leaders that wouldn't let them vote. And, when leaders rise up that take our right to vote and we don't stop them they will prevail.

          > it's just that everyone on the planet with a weapon has coincidentally decided not to murder you, for now.

          Correct. Start up a big disaster where food goes away for some reason and it comes back.

          We have a stable world where we don't kill each other at the moment because in general we all have food, water, shelter, and I would say enough entertainment that fighting each other isn't worth the risk. There is no rule that says this will last forever. Quite often in history there have been stable times, that then fell apart because of greed and malice of leaders.

          • burkaman 20 days ago

            I am not saying it's impossible for rights to be taken away, I am arguing against this statement:

            > If you can't defend yourself against that then you have no rights.

            I do not own a gun and I have no fighting skills, so I cannot defend myself against men with guns. Would you agree that I therefore have no rights?

            I think that you and the original poster are seeing the situation "you are vulnerable to potentially losing rights in the future", which is true, but conflating that with "you have no rights". It's like telling a rich person "you actually don't have any money" because it's possible they might be robbed someday.

            • pixl97 20 days ago

              >Would you agree that I therefore have no rights?

              You have the right to vote, if you lose that right, and you don't have a gun after that you have whatever 'rights' that are provided to you by a dictator.

              One of the things you're missing here is the idea of herd immunity. While you won't fight for your rights, theoretically someone else will making taking your rights dangerous. Once enough people won't fight for their rights, or enough of the population gathers together to take your rights, you lose your rights.

              • pmontra 20 days ago

                I believe that in this conversation one party is saying that people have intrinsic rights (see the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) and the other party might agree on that but they say that those rights can be enforced only if they can be defended. Example: both parties probably agree that people have a right to free speech but nevertheless people end up in jail if they attempt free speech on the wrong subject in the wrong country.

            • duskdozer 20 days ago

              Philosophically, no. Practically, no, as long as someone desires and is able to defend them, otherwise yes.

        • sumedh 20 days ago

          > but it obviously doesn't make sense if you think about it for more than five seconds.

          Maduro would disagree.

        • michaelt 20 days ago

          > it obviously doesn't make sense if you think about it for more than five seconds. [...] It's just a refusal to accept the philosophical concept of rights.

          Or it's an attempt to reconcile the philosophical concept of rights with global politics and observed reality.

          Does an Afghan girl have a right to education? A Uyghur Muslim a right to freedom of religion? A Palestinian a right to food? A Hong Kong resident a right to freedom of expression?

          It would appear that in these cases, the politicians commanding the loyalty of the men with guns do what they can, while the weak suffer what they must.

          Of course, that's not the only reasonable line of thinking. Just because people in distant lands don't have certain rights in practice, I have those rights because I live in a great country with strong institutions and the rule of law.

        • DangitBobby 20 days ago

          Refusing to accept the philosophical concept of rights is just correct. You are born with fuck all unless people have decided you are entitled to something by existing. Plenty of people were born without anything remotely resembling rights. If rights were inherent and not simple enforced by people, that wouldn't be the case, would it? Life isn't a fairy tail.

          • svara 20 days ago

            Civilization is literally built on what you're saying being wrong.

            It's not wrong because of physics or biology, but because civilization made it so.

            Like so many cultural achievements, it's true when you can count on the person next to you expecting it to be true. (1)

            Which in turn means you can make that culture collapse if you impress enough people with your edgelord attitude.

            Cooperative culture is fragile and must be preserved by preserving shared values such as these. On the other hand, in the long run, the cultures that do this successfully prevail because cooperation is stronger than the law of the jungle.

            Unfortunately that 'long run' may take a while.

            (1) That's basically the definition of a cultural value. They're emergent phenomena based on Keynesian beauty contests.

          • burkaman 20 days ago

            Yes, and people have decided I'm entitled to something by existing. That's what human society and civilization is built on. It's been true for the entire history of our species.

      • throw0101d 20 days ago

        > Because all it takes is men with guns to change what rights you think you have.

        Plenty folks of didn't / don't change their minds about what rights they thought they had/have, even in the face of guns. Just look at what's currently going in Iran.

        If you're in the US, and believe in your own Constitution, then people have "unalienable Rights" that are "endowed by their Creator", regardless of whether they are recognized by the government or not:

        * https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/declaration-transcrip...

        * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Declaration_of_I...

      • OkayPhysicist 20 days ago

        You're conflating rights with freedoms, which is the same category error as confusing legality with morality.

        Your rights are, by their nature inalienable. They are recognized (or not) by individual power structures, granting you freedoms.

        Under an authoritarian regime, your freedoms maybe be limited, for example, your right to free speech may be curtailed by men with guns. Killing those men is illegal, but not unethical, exactly because they are infringing your rights.

        This all may seem academic to the person with a boot on their throat, but it dictates how outsiders view one's actions.

      • Volundr 20 days ago

        > If you can't defend yourself against that then you have no rights.

        My sister is wheelchair bound with MS. Half the time she can barely see. You can give her all the guns you want and she isn't going be to able to defend herself. I reject your nonsense assertion that because of this she has no rights.

      • chrneu 20 days ago

        race to the bottom logic

        this kind of logic will always lead to everyone losing in the long run. always. there will always be a more powerful bully that steps up to take over. history is very clear on this one.

        • immibis 20 days ago

          You might be conflating description with prescription.

          Descriptively, powerful people have all the rights and weak people have none. This is what we observe in the world. No amount of philosophical thought outweighs actual observations. For example, Donald Trump has (retroactively!) the right to r**e ch*ldren. We know this because he is not suffering consequences for doing that. But Renee Good did not have a right to free speech. We know this because she was executed because of her speech.

          You can prescribe whatever fancy academia language you want, but the facts in the real world don't seem to currently support any of it beyond "might makes rights".

      • throw310822 20 days ago

        Ok. So a man with a gun has the right to shoot you and kill you. Then a policeman comes with a bigger gun and he has the right to kidnap the murderer. Then comes a judge with an even bigger gun (the law) and has the right to lock him up in a prison. But then the murderer gets hold of a weapon and he has the right to escape from prison. Etc.

        You see that this view doesn't go very far.

      • dragonwriter 20 days ago

        Might can defend, or violate, rights, but it does not make them.

        • DangitBobby 20 days ago

          What does make them? Children apparently don't have them, and many races in many countries didn't have them for a long time either. How do you account for that? Are we now distinguishing between "having" rights and uh... being allow to use them?

      • lostlogin 20 days ago

        How are all those guns helping in the US right now, as it turns authoritarian?

        • mlrtime 20 days ago

          Pretty good, thanks for asking!

          • lostlogin 20 days ago

            I’m confused. I thought the guns were for stopping an authoritarian regime?

            • mlrtime 20 days ago

              I'll cut the cheekiness, I disagree with a "authoritarian regime". I don't support everything, but to some up an entire government as "authoritarian regime" is wrong IMO.

              So why would I use my guns again?

              • lostlogin 19 days ago

                > to some up an entire government as "authoritarian regime" is wrong IMO

                It doesn’t work like that though. The most authoritarian regime in the world has bits that seem benign, we don’t judge them on that.

                We judge them based on the extremes. Things like masked men grabbing civilians off the street and shooting them in the face, with the full support of the regime.

      • svara 20 days ago

        You can go back to the ancient Greeks to explain what is wrong about that.

        Literally two thousand years of civilization were spent on combating the pockets in which people live by that principle.

    • j-krieger 20 days ago

      > No, I'm not taking lessons in democracy from JD Vance, thank you very much

      You are falling into a trap where you can not recognize a true point because it is made by someone you disagree with. I don't condone Vance or the Trump admin. He is right about European governemnt's attacks on free speech.

      • jacquesm 20 days ago

        And you are falling into the trap of thinking that if a person is busy deconstructing what used to be one of the larger democracies in the world that their other words are going to be taken at face value, which obviously is not going to happen.

        We're not discussing Pol Pot's views on cooking either, even though he might have had some valuable insight. Bringing up Vance and Musk in polite conversation to bolster your argument is - especially in the context of Europe, which both men seem to have declared to be enemy #1 before Russia and China - a little tone deaf.

        • nkmnz 20 days ago

          To be fair, he's not bringing them up as intellectual support for his argumentative base – he's bringing them up as support for acts of retaliation. This is mostly about power and we've lost 30% in power vs. the US in just ~12 years because we've fucked up our economy.

          • jacquesm 20 days ago

            Maybe 'the economy' is not the only valid yardstick to compare countries by?

            • nkmnz 20 days ago

              I absolutely and 100% agree! But it's the stick that others will use to force their world view down your throat. So if you want to be not only righteous, but also hold others accountable according to your standards, you need the economic power to do so.

          • lostlogin 20 days ago

            > we've lost 30% in power vs. the US in just ~12 years because we've fucked up our economy.

            I wonder how many Americans would prefer to live in the US that existed 12 years ago versus the US today.

            • mlrtime 20 days ago

              People will say anything online, but when it comes to action very little. I'd rather live in the US now or 12 years ago vs Italy unless someone gave me a tuscan villa with a pool

              Virtue signaling at its finest.

              • lostlogin 20 days ago

                I laughed. Im at a the tail end of 3 weeks in Italy, sitting on a train.

                Compared to 20 years ago it’s so much cleaner, quicker, more efficient, friendlier.

                You must be in a great place as it’s fantastic here.

                • mlrtime 20 days ago

                  Oh I've been multiple times, it's beautiful! But vacationing is not living + working, paying bills, dealing with bureaucracy or culture clashes, etc...

          • DangitBobby 20 days ago

            Most of our power loss is from electing a belligerent dumb fuck twice and allowing him to sabotage our international relationships and destroying our remaining credibility.

            • nkmnz 20 days ago

              I was speaking about Europe as a whole. Economically, we suck. Losing UK didn't help, either, but except for Poland, we've become relatively poorer by an insane amount, compared to the US. Another 10 years on that path and we're half the US.

            • mlrtime 20 days ago

              What power loss? OP is talking about Italian power loss?

        • j-krieger 20 days ago

          > And you are falling into the trap of thinking that if a person is busy deconstructing what used to be one of the larger democracies in the world that their other words are going to be taken at face value, which obviously is not going to happen.

          No. I'm identifying this one statement as factual, regardless of the person saying it. Surely then, you would not deny the color of the sun to be yellow just because Pot might have observed it to be that way?

          • jacquesm 20 days ago

            That's besides the point: JD Vance and Musk are precisely the wrong entities to have opinions on stuff like this because they are on the wrong side of that line most of the time. Especially Musk, but Vance has his own ulterior motives to berate the EU on anything so regardless of the outcome it will be tainted.

            • j-krieger 20 days ago

              > JD Vance and Musk are precisely the wrong entities to have opinions on stuff like this because they are on the wrong side of that line most of the time. Especially Musk, but Vance has his own ulterior motives to berate the EU on anything so regardless of the outcome it will be tainted.

              People focus on Vance in this issue because they hate him and hate is easy to come by. They ignore that popular Democrats and progressives said the same thing. Hell, even the Atlantic posted a piece about the issue.

              • jacquesm 20 days ago

                People focus on Vance because he's the one referenced in the tweet.

                • mlrtime 20 days ago

                  And most of the online world do not like him, so here we are.

                  If it was someone else, we'd all be cheering because the person is on a different team.

            • mlrtime 20 days ago

              >they are on the wrong side of that line most of the time.

              To you, yes. Which shows your biases.

      • gpm 20 days ago

        It has been very clear that the Trump adminstrations definition of freedom of speech, including JD Vance's, is that you should be free to say whatever the Trump administration wants and nothing else.

        They have consistently prosecuted, threatened, deported, withheld money from, and so on people who say things they do not like.

      • chrneu 20 days ago

        you are falling into the trap of ignoring the pandering. cloudflare bro is clearly pandering here and showing that, in the moment, he will say/do whatever to whomever to get what he wants. cloudflare kind of has a history of doing this.

        there was zero reason to name drop vance and elon besides appealing to their rabid fans to bolster support.

        it's just more hypocrisy.

        • iamnothere 20 days ago

          What other option do they have? It’s either comply with unjust rulings that undermine the free internet (and their business) or make a deal with the devil. Either one is bad but only complying has an immediate negative impact.

          If there was any sense that this ruling was just a temporary mistake that will be corrected by pending regulation/legislation, then a third option would be on the table: temporarily comply and wait it out. But all indications are that the EU is hell-bent on making things worse, not better, for the open internet.

          • jacquesm 20 days ago

            Cloudflare, the company that regularly blocks me from legitimately visiting websites because their bot detection software absolutely sucks probably is the biggest effective censor on the planet.

    • xinayder 20 days ago

      The AI generated art is also disgusting. Makes the CEO look like an angry kid because his multi-billion dolar industry got a 1% income fine, which is nothing for them, for a service they provide that keeps having outages because they have bad coders who thought moving their shit code to Rust was a good idea.

  • riedel 20 days ago

    I would like to see a similar rant about the DMCA from US CEOs, which amounts to similar global effect. Not a great law but all this censorship stuff is bullshit.

    To replicate the rant: Cloudflare on the otherhand blocks me regularly from using the Internet using a privacy aware browser because I fail to pass their bot checks so that I can enter their CDN based replica of a real internet.

    • resfirestar 20 days ago

      To be fair big tech did do a full court press to stop site blocking when such a law (SOPA/PIPA) was proposed in the US, and they continue to oppose the MPA's attempts to get site blocking via the courts. DMCA on the other hand seems very broken, don't give the MPA the "3 strikes" regime they want and you get sued into the ground like Cox. I suspect tech CEOs don't complain about this because they don't want the same treatment.

    • miki123211 20 days ago

      AFAIK, the DMCA doesn't require infrastructure providers (ISPs, DNS resolvers, "relay" services like Cloudflare) to block entire websites. It's just for surgical removals of content (and blocking of ISP / hosting provider customers who are notorious infringers).

      The US doesn't have the kind of website blocking laws that many European countries have.

      • riedel 20 days ago

        If you look at those 'whole websites' it is nearly exclusively sites that do not comply with takedown requests regarding copyright (actually those blocking laws/procedures do mostly foresee any other reason). The question I was addressing is the judicial control and the abuse for censorship. DCMA takedown request are massively abused without any real judicial control. Sure you can fight those in court, but so you could fight ISP blocks. I thing the different methods simply stem from a different legal system with different types of fines (particularly in civil law)

  • Karuhanga 20 days ago

    I agree with this sentiment. His tweet was quite disingenuous and it doesn’t help that he’s tagging Musk and Vance. The noise they make about free speech is a charade.

    I still can’t understand why these tech CEOs are doing so many cynical things even in places where they have the chance to start healthy debate.

    It’s so frustrating.

  • rcastellotti 20 days ago

    se non del tutto giusto, quasi niente sbagliato :)

  • mcintyre1994 20 days ago

    He says that JD Vance and Elon Musk believe in free speech, so I’m inclined to conclude that he’s far beyond reason.

    • mlrtime 20 days ago

      And I think that when you are so far biased in one direction there is nothing these two could do to alter your opinion in anyway. Thus making it irrelevant to the discussion.

  • anthem2025 20 days ago

    Why would you be inclined to think that?

    Why? Because tech companies have shown to bbe honest and transparent? Because their flouting of the law has ever been anything but extreme self interest?

    FFS Grok is openly a revenge porn and CSAM generator. These aren’t good people and they aren’t the sort we want as champions of speech because they are not interested in anything but their own profits.

  • bflesch 20 days ago

    I also wonder why he felt emboldened to escalate like this. Maybe he thinks Italy is so small it can be slapped around by a rage post on Twitter?

    There's a DNS blocklist from media industry applied by German ISPs and I assume Cloudflare was also asked to block these websites, so why didn't I read a story about Cloudflare making a big stir about the German DNS blocking?

    • j-krieger 20 days ago

      > There's a DNS blocklist from media industry applied by German ISPs

      By the CUII with no judicial oversight. German organizations like the CCC and free speech activists very much hate that this is a thing.

      • nkmnz 20 days ago

        Posting it a hundred times doesn't make your claim more correct. If your rights are infringed, you can always go to court. If you think you being blocked from accessing certain information is an infringement of Art. 2 Abs. 1 GG ("Every person shall have the right to free development of his personality [...]"), you can drag this to The Federal Constitutional Court.

        • j-krieger 20 days ago

          No I can't, since I lack the monetary funds. My claim stands correct, going to the federal constitutional court is expensive enough that many people are barred from that option. My claim stands correct - no judicial verdict is needed for the CUII to censor websites. Don't believe me. Believe the activists [1].

          [1]: https://media.ccc.de/v/39c3-cuii-wie-konzerne-heimlich-webse...

          • nkmnz 20 days ago

            new comment: you're so wrong that not even the opposite of your statement would be true. CUII is a private body, but it forces its members to go to court before they ask CUII to initiate a block:

            Jede DNS-Sperre einer strukturell urheberrechtsverletzenden Webseite (SUW) wird im Rahmen der CUII gerichtlich überprüft.

            Das ist freiwillige Selbstverpflichtung der CUII-Mitglieder. Denn eigentlich besteht kein Richtervorbehalt für die Sperransprüche nach § 8 Digitale-Dienste-Gesetz (DDG). Aus diesem Grund sind auch die DNS-Sperren nach dem alten Verhaltenskodex mit behördlicher Beteiligung zulässig gewesen (Siehe Fragen: “Was verändert sich durch den neuen Verhaltenskodex der CUII?” und “Warum gab es zum Juli 2025 - nach jahrelanger Arbeit - einen Systemwechsel in der CUII?”).

            old comment: CUII is not a governmental body so what the hell should they need a court order for when doing the thing that their members pay them to do? If your not happy with your internet access provider being a member of CUII, switch your internet access provider. I agree that CUII should publish a list of blocked domains as part of transparent communication and proving that they are doing a good job.

            • j-krieger 20 days ago

              Why should a private entity control what people see online?

              • nkmnz 20 days ago

                Why should you - a private entity - control what content other people have to serve you?

                • j-krieger 20 days ago

                  ISPs act as gatekeepers for essential information. When they control what flows, they’re effectively regulating speech.

                  • nkmnz 19 days ago

                    I'm ready to discuss this as soon as we're speaking about essential information and not about your urge to access other people's work for free.

      • bflesch 20 days ago

        Yes, I didn't want to say it is a good thing.

    • cubefox 20 days ago

      If the German filters only apply to ISPs in Germany, they have no effect on users in foreign countries. Moreover, Cloudflare is obviously not an ISP.

      • riffraff 20 days ago

        the filters the Italian authorities complain about also only apply in italy.

        It's likely a process thing, Italy has had website bans since forever, but the new regulation applies _without going through a judge_. Some copyright holders can say "this website is infringing" and ISPs, CDNs etc.. are required to shut them down immediately.

        A similar system was introduced in Spain, with the same problems, for the same reason (football $$$).

        EDIT: to be clear, CF argues that they need to block the DNS globally, and that's unreasonable. The Italian authority argues that they have the skills to do a local block and are just being uncooperative.

        • Root_Denied 20 days ago

          > EDIT: to be clear, CF argues that they need to block the DNS globally, and that's unreasonable. The Italian authority argues that they have the skills to do a local block and are just being uncooperative.

          Similar to the UK's attempt to try and get noncompliant sites like Imgur and 4chan to block themselves from serving content to UK locations, I think the responsibility for country-wide blocks lies with the country attempting to regulate the space, not CDNs or websites.

          I don't doubt that Italy is correct that CF has the technical ability do a local block like they're asking for, but I also don't see how CF is in any way (legally) compelled to do so. Whether or not Italy (or any country) is capable of doing so, or paying contractors for an appropriate solution, isn't CF's problem either.

          • wmf 20 days ago

            The difference is that Imgur/4chan have no presence in the UK but Cloudflare has servers and probably a sales office in Italy. Cloudflare does have to follow Italian law within Italy.

            Either Cloudflare can block pirate sites or ISPs will completely block Cloudflare (as seen in Spain). Which way do you prefer?

            • Root_Denied 15 days ago

              As I understand it Cloudflare is being asked to block these sites globally, and what I said was that Italy doesn't have the legal authority to request that CF do so globally.

              Locally, within Italy I can see the argument that CF can be compelled to adhere to blocking sites for any requests originating from, or being routed to Italy - so long as Cloudflare maintains any kind of presence there. That goes for any other country, too.

              Realistically maintaining this kind of work puts a financial and engineering overhead on Cloudflare (or any CDN) for running operations in that country, and that incentivizes Cloudflare to push back on this request from any country. The logical response from CF is to refuse and threaten to remove all operations from the country if the country tries to force the issue, to prevent CF from getting pulled into the same requirements for multiple other countries, which is exactly what CF did a couple days ago.

              I'll reiterate my previous stance - if a country wants to block part of the internet, that country needs to do it themselves and for the space within which they have authority to do so (their borders). At that point it's up to the citizens of the country to push back if they disagree, and if they don't want to be compared to China and their Great Firewall they shouldn't try and regulate the internet.

        • blibble 20 days ago

          > The Italian authority argues that they have the skills to do a local block

          they certainly do, they have the source IP and their platform lets them geolocate an ip

      • bflesch 20 days ago

        Do you think the Italian bureaucrats really want to ban something in France or Germany?

        The Cloudflare CEO is clearly misinterpreting something that was lost in translation, which is the bureaucrats stating "Cloudflare must prevent access to XY from everywhere". For bureaucrats "everywhere" means "in my jurisdiction". I cannot believe that the Cloudflare CEO is trying to nitpick around a single word that he so clearly misinterprets.

        • tick_tock_tick 20 days ago

          > Do you think the Italian bureaucrats really want to ban something in France or Germany?

          Yes 100% they absolutely do.

      • nkmnz 20 days ago

        I'm pretty sure Cloudflare is an ISP according to German law ("Diensteanbieter" according to DDG). You might confuse "ISP" with the terminology of "Access Provider" according to the (now defunct) §8 TMG.

        • cubefox 20 days ago

          If that were true, sci-hub.se would be blocked in Germany on 1.1.1.1 (1dot1dot1dot1.cloudflare-dns.com), it isn't blocked, therefore it's not true. (Modus tollens)

          • nkmnz 20 days ago

            Your reasoning is impeccable, bravo. But it's wrong. Both your premise and your conclusion are based on completely wrong assumptions.

            • cubefox 20 days ago

              Not sure which premise you disagree with, but the conclusion follows from them.

              • nkmnz 20 days ago

                I am a Service Provider ("Diensteanbieter") according to DDG and I don't block a single page, which makes your statement not only wrong, but rather so wrong that not even the complete opposite would make any sense.

                • cubefox 19 days ago

                  Not necessarily. Perhaps small service providers are exempt from blocking sci-hub.se. But Cloudflare is certainly not small.

                  • nkmnz 19 days ago

                    Have you ever considered reading the law before attempting to discuss it?

                    • cubefox 19 days ago

                      You are clearly unable to cite a portion of the law which proves that Cloudflare counts as a service provider.

                      • nkmnz 18 days ago

                        § 1 Absatz 4 Nummer 5 Digitale-Dienste Gesetz: Im Sinne dieses Gesetzes ist oder sind „Diensteanbieter“ Anbieter digitaler Dienste;

                        • cubefox 18 days ago

                          That's just stating a tautology.

                          • nkmnz 18 days ago

                            No, it's not. It's a very precise way to state that the law has to be applied to a very wide range of service providers. This is a fundamental change compared to the previous regulation TKG. Now take the loss and next time, read the damn manual first.

                            • cubefox 18 days ago

                              The quote does not decide whether Cloudflare counts as a "service provider" or not.

                              • nkmnz 18 days ago

                                Oh really… then let’s make it obvious:

                                1. Do they offer any kind of service? YES.

                                2. Is the service they offer of a digital nature? Also YES.

                                It’s never been easier.

    • carlosjobim 20 days ago

      What is the escalation? Cloudflare or any company is free to stop doing business in any country which mistreats them or doesn't align with their interest. How can you interpret this in some way as Cloudflare being the aggressor? They don't owe the nation of Italy anything.

dependsontheq 20 days ago

Let's be a bit more honest here, I think the Italian law is badly defined, but I also think the american perspective is wrong.

We (all tech people everywhere me included) argued for a lot of time for free speech on the internet, but the result currently is that we built a system that is free speech for Russian and Chinese bots and actors. In Europe we are under daily attack from Russian accounts that spread massive amounts of desinformation, deep fakes, just emotional appeals with the goal of destroying liberal democracy. The US government is actively trying to support them by fighting against any kind of European rules and spreading their part of desinformation.

This is not about normal politics, Europe is under siege.

  • Nextgrid 20 days ago

    > we are under daily attack from Russian accounts

    We would go a long way if our communication platforms weren't intentionally amplifying the most controversial voices for the sake of maximizing ad revenue.

    Back in the day the Russians needed to spend money to buy influence. Now they can just make their propaganda engaging enough and Western companies will happily host it and promote it for free.

    • throw__away7391 20 days ago

      This is the entire problem. This is possibly the single problem in the modern world. When social media first appeared, "feeds" were based on explicit subscription by the users and ordered chronologically. Later "likes" were added, but this was still based on deliberate user behavior and simple deterministic sorting while the ability to "repost" greatly expanded the reach of individual posts, later algorithms were introduced then the number of signals expanded beyond explicit user input to implicit engagement measures. Each step along this path has taken agency away from individuals.

      I read articles and comments about people who were fired or suffered other consequences for something they said online, and the responses are righteous indignation--they ought to have known better than to post these things online! How did we get into this fucked up state of affairs? Social media started off as a way to talk to your friends, and over time your friends have been replaced with strangers, what they can say and who gets to say what controlled by centralized authorities, while individuals have been taught to self-censor.

      It is not only the US companies or Russian bots, every government in the world is itching to get their thumb on the scale here to have a say in what the people are allowed to see, to hear, and to say.

    • xilaraux 20 days ago

      > Now they can just make their propaganda engaging enough and Western companies will happily host it and promote it for free.

      Important to distinguish here that all of these companies are not just Western but American.

      • ndsipa_pomu 20 days ago

        I'm sure there's examples of non-US media companies pushing ragebait and similar. e.g. from the UK, there's BBC, Telegraph, Daily Mail, local news sites etc.

        It's a perverse incentive that in chasing engagement, the ragebait is selected for.

      • RuslanL 19 days ago

        Do we have comparable European companies though?

    • woooooo 20 days ago

      Isn't that just "culture"? Let the best content win? It used to be that the USA was comfortable competing and winning along these lines.

      • furyofantares 19 days ago

        If you tautologically define "best" as "that which wins", sure.

        There's many ways for something to be better than another thing, though, and a lot of stuff is winning because it's best at "engagement" even if it's really bad in many other ways.

        • JumpCrisscross 19 days ago

          > If you tautologically define "best" as "that which wins", sure

          Spot on. By OP’s metric, we should shift all agricultural and pharmaceutical production to heroin.

          • woooooo 19 days ago

            I've seen some straw-men in my day but "OP wants to shift all agricultural production to heroin" might be an all-timer.

      • Imustaskforhelp 20 days ago

        Yes (sort of), but the definition of best has changed so drastically built on completely different benchmarks (engagement)

        As an example, watch a really good documentary on something, I would consider it best

        But it might have less views than some AI slop video perhaps even generated in a minute

        Another aspect relevant to the propaganda discussion is that I think modern algorithms have decided that ragebait is the best form of engagement and this is why propaganda might spread fast and how social media might actually actively help the foreign nation

        I would argue that this is one of the reasons social media actively harms but its that profit over all for social media seems genuinely harmful. We need more focus on bluesky and mastodon and other alternatives as well to establish a network effect there but also that I would argue that prosecuting social media / large tech companies should have such a case where something can be prosecuted criminally for a class law suit case so that these social medias can stay better in shape than being deranged

        But the issue to me feels like I am already protesting Italian even fining because in this case to me it feels like abusing the vagueness of the law and other factors so I am sure that if we give govts more power they might have the ability to abuse it as well for some lobbying powers (in this case it seems to be football)

        Everything boils down to what the genuine incentives of the govts are I guess. I mean some are trying to do somethings but I guess all of this is just really tricky and the answer is in a series of changes and not a single one. There is nuance to this like every other discussion

        • woooooo 20 days ago

          Ok, but are we losers who cannot compete culturally? Where's the faith and confidence? We can't compete with AI slop?

          • saubeidl 20 days ago

            Can broccoli compete with heroin? Why don't we offer people both and see what they like better? Let them compete! Give people choice!

            • CWuestefeld 20 days ago

              Who gets to decide where to draw the line?

              • s1mplicissimus 17 days ago

                Well when I grew up in the early days of the internet, the plan was to have it decided by a democratically elected government that acts in good faith.

                Since that didn't seem to work I'm kinda out of ideas as well

            • woooooo 19 days ago

              Setting aside the bad analogy, real people are much more likely to eat broccoli than to do heroin.

              • saubeidl 19 days ago

                Once they've had a taste of both?

                • woooooo 19 days ago

                  I am confident that the number of broccoli eaters exceeds the number of heroin users.

                  • saubeidl 19 days ago

                    I would posit that is because many more people have had a taste of broccoli than of heroin.

                    • keybored 7 days ago

                      You would posit based on what? Defunct rats-pressing-pleasure-button studies?

                      Many people have had "heroin" in the form of morphine in the hospital. They don’t turn into morphine-seekers.

                      Addiction and pleasure seeking is more complex than having a taste and then being hooked forever. Of course many people can't get out of this Skinner Box type of mindset.

  • CrzyLngPwd 20 days ago

    Well, we cry "freedom of speech" when Russia/China/adversary shuts our propaganda-pushing media or tools out.

    Freedom of speech for me, not for thee, eh?

    I don't want my politicians deciding what is good or bad on the internet. I'm an adult, and I can decide for myself.

    • pheggs 20 days ago

      Free speech for the individuals is needed, in terms of people should not be punished for what they say. But social media platforms owned by foreign countries is a danger for any democracy. There's a reason the US wants to capture Tiktok, Iran is shutting down the internet, and China has The Great Firewall.

      Since the US is turning away from Europe's interests, it's just logical that American platforms will be restricted in one way or another. I don't see any way around it.

      • Imustaskforhelp 20 days ago

        There is a big difference between danger for democracy because of these addiction farming Social media platforms with propaganda and something like piracy as well though.

    • vouwfietsman 20 days ago

      > I'm an adult, and I can decide for myself.

      No you can't, all of this stuff is designed to influence you without you knowing it, or you would not be influenced. This is like thinking advertisements have no effect on you.

      People pay good money because they know it is effective, it is influencing you, you cannot decide for yourself.

      • lucianbr 20 days ago

        So who gets to decide? Someone who is above influence? Who is that?

        There has to be a lot more nuance. I clearly see that both Putin and the CCP do a lot of things predicated on the exact claim that their respective populations can not be left to decide for themselves. "People left free would make bad decisions, we the rulers are morally obligated to force them into a good path". I think this is the ostensible meaning of "freedom is slavery".

        • Barrin92 19 days ago

          There has to be nuance yes. But the nuanced position starts with accepting the reality that a ton of people are indeed having their brain turned to goo. Just go outside of the bubble of somewhat tech literate highly educated young people and look at what 60+ year olds consume on Facebook.

          There's AI generated content with tens of millions of views that is as fake as ancient aliens on the history channel but nobody seems to realize it. If you comment here there is a high chance you did not grow up among people with 8 years of basic education who haven't read a book in 20 years and believe quite literally everything they see. That is what a decent chunk of any population is like. The biggest blind spot of well-educated internet libertarians who taught themselves how to code at 15 is that they in all likelihood have no concept of how the average citizen navigates the world.

          The problem with Putin isn't that he thinks a country needs intelligent and wise leaders, Plato would have told you the same thing. It's where he's steering it that's the issue and that the country's leadership is no more capable at the top than it is at the bottom.

      • GoblinSlayer 20 days ago

        Doubtful.

    • scrollaway 20 days ago

      > I don't want my politicians deciding what is good or bad on the internet. I'm an adult, and I can decide for myself.

      The issue isn't whether politicians are deciding what's good or bad.

      The issue is that, in Europe, foreign actors with explicit ill intent are deciding a ton of the content your neighbours are watching/reading, day in day out, on the internet. AI has made this easier and even more scalable than before. This content is being used to influence or outright decide elections. Elections of more politicians that are "deciding what's good or bad", eh. Such as politicians deciding that Russia is good.

      What the actual fuck do we do to defend ourselves, pray tell? The whole "let them have critical thinking" doesn't work, we are under active war and citizens who don't know better are specifically targeted. And besides, we are not gonna take lessons from the country that yelled high and mighty for years they're the land of the free, and let itself fall into complete autocracy & dictatorship. In the US, those same citizens are the useful tools repeating state propaganda, two steps removed from "Just Following Orders".

      And full context: I agree with Matt and support Cloudflare's stance here. But people can quit it with cheap retorts like "Freedom of speech for me, not for thee". It's not that simple.

      • nxm 20 days ago

        into complete autocracy & dictatorship....ummm you mean a democratically elected president & government? Plus these hyperboles don't really resonate anymore as they've been used for every little thing people don't like. It's still a democracy even if you don't like the outcome.

      • GoblinSlayer 20 days ago

        >What the actual fuck do we do to defend ourselves, pray tell?

        Delete smartphone, logout from abusive SaaS.

        • scrollaway 20 days ago

          So, putting your head in the sand and pretending the world doesn't keep turning?

          Deleting X (which I've done) doesn't stop Russia from influencing the voterbase of my neighbouring countries. Now what?

    • intended 20 days ago

      The current methods of subverting speech involve the opposite of control.

      They involve overwhelming the channels.

      The play is to influence at m scale, millions of individual choices, just like yours.

      Your position is no longer the entirety of the defense we need for free speech online.

    • tootie 19 days ago

      What about spam? Spam is absolutely protected free speech. Nobody bats an eye at aggressive censorship of spam. We've had the US Congress pass bills restricting spam. Should we overturn all of that and let the spammers have absolute freedom?

    • sambuccid 19 days ago

      But let's be honest, right now it's big tech with their algorithm that's deciding for you. Of course you are still free to find the content you want (unlike what would happen with banning) but most people minds can be influenced by the political view of who owns the platform if they wish to do so.

      Maybe a bit of this is already happening (obvious suspect being X) or maybe not, I guess we'll never know for sure, but there is clearly an huge issue here that needs fixing as soon as possible.

    • saubeidl 20 days ago

      Because freedom of speech was always a misguided creed at best.

      The speech of the manipulator is not the same as the speech of the expert and they shouldn't be given the same treatment, lest you want psychological warfare waged on your nation.

      American free speech extremists like these tech CEOs are either willing patsies or useful idiots in the hybrid warfare against Europe.

      • lucianbr 20 days ago

        What rules can you possibly have that distinguish the expert and the manipulator in all cases, without abuse?

        I think free speech comes from the same base as universal vote: any selection mechanism would be corrupted and in the end cause more harm than good. That is why the solution is to let everyone speak / vote. If you have some uncorruptible people or mechanism for selection, just use that to make policy decisions directly.

        I think the solution is to elevate critical thinking in the populations, so people can be less vulnerable to psychological warfare. Otherwise you're just picking a different manipulator - whoever writes or enforces the speech limits.

        • saubeidl 20 days ago

          I think the solution is to elect a commission of experts to be deciding this. Term limits. Separate independent institution from the government - no meddling.

          Critical thinking even in those capable of it is a limited resource. I can't spend all day every day critically examining every single statement the internet flings at me - it's mentally exhausting and wears one down.

          Let's elect proxies to do it for us.

          • lucianbr 19 days ago

            Elect by the people at large? People who voted for Trump and such? What's the point in an elected institution separated from the government - the government is already elected, and people will mostly vote for candidates from the same parties in all elections.

            Besides, "elect a comission of experts" is a contradiction. Experts are not elected. Expertise is not determined by voting. You want to appoint or select a comission of experts, or elect a comission of politicians. These are the choices. Appointment or selection will be done by someone else, likely politicians too.

            You just hope some incorruptible competent people will get there by magic. They will not.

            If you could do this, just elect a comission of experts to run the country, instead of this "truth comission" that makes sure people are well informed to vote correctly in elections for the real government, which will in turn run the country. Why do the indirection? There is no reason, if you could "elect" good people, but you can't.

          • TylerLives 19 days ago

            And who will watch the watchdogs?

      • mrec 20 days ago

        > The speech of the manipulator is not the same as the speech of the expert

        I don't think that's contentious. The point of free speech is not that all speech is equally valuable or positive. It's that I don't trust you to decide which speech shouldn't be allowed, because that power will 100% be abused, until it's just as pernicious as the "manipulators" it's claiming to defend against.

      • duskdozer 20 days ago

        >American free speech extremists like these tech CEOs

        well, claim to be free speech extremists at least

        • saubeidl 20 days ago

          Indeed. I think with some of the more government-aligned oligarchs it's more of a pretense to enable said information warfare.

      • joebe89 20 days ago

        These tech CEOs just want to have to spend as little as possible to maintain their platforms. They don't actually care about freedom of speech beyond that.

    • flohofwoe 20 days ago

      > Well, we cry "freedom of speech" when Russia/China/adversary shuts our propaganda-pushing media or tools out.

      That "cyring" must have been awfully quiet, I didn't hear anything at least.

      • azangru 20 days ago

        I don't know if any of the links below will count as crying; but here are some, from the British media reporting on Russia:

            - BBC, 2018: Russia: Google removes Putin critic's ads from YouTube https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-45471519
            - BBC, 2021: How Russia tries to censor Western social media https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-59687496
            - BBC, 2021: Russia slows down Twitter over 'banned content'  https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-56344304
            - BBC, 2021: Russia threatens YouTube ban for deleting RT channels https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-58737433
            - BBC, 2021: Russia threatens to slow down Google over banned content https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-57241779
            - Reuters, 2022: Russia blocks access to BBC and Voice of America websites  https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/russia-restricts-access-bbc-russian-service-radio-liberty-ria-2022-03-04/
            - The Guardian, 2022: Russia blocks access to Facebook and Twitter https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/mar/04/russia-completely-blocks-access-to-facebook-and-twitter
            - BBC, 2022: Russia restricts social media access https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-60533083
            - BBC, 2022: Russia confirms Meta's designation as extremist https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-63218095
            - BBC, 2024: Data shows YouTube 'practically blocked' in Russia - https://monitoring.bbc.co.uk/product/b0003111
            - BBC, 2024: Russia's 2024 digital crackdown reshapes social media landscape - https://monitoring.bbc.co.uk/product/b0003arza
      • drysine 20 days ago

        "The EU condemns the totally unfounded decision by the Russian authorities to block access to over eighty European media in Russia.

        This decision further restricts access to free and independent information and expands the already severe media censorship in Russia. The banned European media work according to journalistic principles and standards. They give factual information, also to Russian audiences, including on Russia’s illegal war of aggression against Ukraine.

        In contrast, the Russian disinformation and propaganda outlets, against which the EU has introduced restrictive measures, do not represent a free and independent media. Their broadcasting activities in the EU have been suspended because these outlets are under the control of the Russian authorities and they are instrumental in supporting the war of aggression against Ukraine.

        Respect for the freedom of expression and media is a core value for the EU. It will continue supporting availability of factual information also to audiences in Russia."[0]

        Funny, eh?

        [0] https://www.eeas.europa.eu/eeas/russia-statement-high-repres...

    • bambax 20 days ago

      > I don't want my politicians deciding

      The whole concept of democracy is based on this: you elect politicians, they decide. If you don't like that, you don't like democracy. Which is fine, but then you don't get to defend it either as the best system under the sun, etc.

      • bmelton 20 days ago

        A lot of people naively interject "But we're not a democracy, we're a Republic!" at arguments where it has no real bearing, but _here_ it does.

        We (America) are not a democracy, we're a constitutionally limited republic. Republic is a subset of democracy, but the 'constitutionally limited republic' part is important. We cannot elect politicians to censor the things that we want censored because our republic has not authorized the government to do censorship, and the bill of rights expressly forbids it. They are constitutionally limited from doing so until and unless the constitution is amended.

        Until and unless we change the constitution, any efforts to do that are illicit. Popular democracy would allow a majority to vote to bring back slavery, and if you don't like that, you don't like democracy.

      • GoblinSlayer 20 days ago

        It's not obvious that democracy implies autocracy.

  • kamma4434 20 days ago

    That would be a political perspective. But what we are discussing now is some very rich football clubs who have a right to filter anything on the internet because they say so.

  • user____name 19 days ago

    This kind of "epistemic collapse" via propaganda is an established method of subverting nation states, Russia has been doing it for decades.

    Democracy relies on having a reasobaly well informed population. The problem today is that it takes ten times more effort to refute bullshit than to spread it. Information hygiene is becoming a very big problem in this anything-goes social media environment.

    Traditional mass media had journalistic norms and standards, nowadays anyone can claim anything with no quality control.

    It's the same age old story: there simply is no substitute for good governance, Italy doesn't have it and hasn't had it for decades, and "freedom of speech absolutists" wouldn't know what it looks like in the first place.

  • babarock 20 days ago

    I think this is moving the goal post. Cloudflare isn't challenging the need to restrict access to some websites, it is challenging who has the right to decide. Quoting the tweet:

    > We believe Italy, like all countries, has a right to regulate the content on networks inside its borders. But they must do so following the Rule of Law and principles of Due Process.

    I live in Italy, I'm a citizen. I don't feel any safer having the internet regulated by a bunch of bureaucrats than I do state actors and bots.

    • bambax 20 days ago

      Bureaucrats are a problem, but they're eventually accountable to the people. Companies are accountable to shareholders located in another country, who don't give a damn about whatever so long as the money keeps coming. I choose bureaucrats against businessmen anytime.

  • Imustaskforhelp 20 days ago

    I am not on any social media so I don't even know what the propaganda is that you are talking about but there are ways to really filter out youtube in such a way (by following unbiased media houses) and I haven't seen much propaganda on youtube (I think)

    > This is not about normal politics, Europe is under siege.

    I am not European but this seems such an dangerous precedent to set upon. You mention destroying liberal democracy but also the fact that Europe is under siege makes people think of providing war time resolutions to Countries even for small details (and Mind you this ban itself has nothing to do with russia that much, its just the amount of influence football has in italy)

    To me it feels as if by saying Europe's under siege, it gives more war time resolutions or justificiations for unmoral behaviour. In fact that's what happened right now. This also actively undermines democracy and one can clearly see how.

    I understand your comment's in good faith and I appreciate it but I am just not even sure how this move of fining Cloudflare for not being in line for their censorship is related to this other instance.

  • Saline9515 20 days ago

    Russian bots and subversive propaganda in general take hold when the quality and diversity of the media decreases, which leads citizens to listen to alternative narratives.

    The tipping point happened during covid - the authorities were so synced up with the media, and the online censorship became so prevalent that the official narrative felt deeply off, coordinated, and often contradictory. There was no debate in the EU, we had to lock down all of the countries, with no alternative (for instance, protect old people but let younger ones live their lives) possible.

    Given how Orwellian and borderline crazy average media discourse had become, especially after the vaccine was out, I saw many people start looking elsewhere. My mother was one of them. She had consumed mostly state media her whole life. As she realized how stupid the narrative had become (state media was discussing if it was ok to sell socks in shops, or if doctors should examine unvaccinated customers), she and others like her turned to online media promoting fringe and radical theories.

    Now, the European bureaucrats, having not learnt their lesson, want to double down and further restrict freedom of speech. The problem is that as long as the local media just repeats the official party line, which often strays away from reality, russian content farms will get new eyeballs.

  • fc417fc802 20 days ago

    How is Cloudflare refusing to comply with DNS censorship even remotely related to propaganda campaigns conducted by the geopolitical opponent of your personal choosing?

    Not only does it seem like you've gone off topic to push a personal agenda, you're presenting a false dichotomy. We could (if we wanted to) wall our networks off along national boundaries while still preserving freedom of speech within our enclave. I don't think that would be a good idea nor do I think the execution of such an initiative would be likely to go smoothly but the example serves to illustrate that there's a huge potential solution space.

    Personally what I don't understand is why Cloudflare didn't stop offering access to 1.1.1.1 from Italian addresses. At the end of the day picking a direct fight with the government of a jurisdiction you operate in seems extremely unwise. I fail to see the upside for them here.

    Actually assuming they don't intentionally operate 1.1.1.1 from within Italy how is it CF's problem if Italians access it? Shouldn't this be on the Italian telecoms to filter traffic to this dastardly "illegal" foreign resolver?

    • Karuhanga 20 days ago

      I think the upside is drawing a line in the sand now before they tighten requests any further and (maybe) not losing the revenue from some genuinely illegal pirating services that use them.

  • mattmaroon 20 days ago

    The problem with this argument, and why free speech absolutism is the only stance that makes sense, is that someone always has a good reason why you need to throw the bathwater out right now, baby be dammed.

    The end result is worse than the disinformation.

    • tootie 19 days ago

      Free speech absolutism is not necessary at all. We can be thoughtful about it. Think about the American criminal justice system and the criminal culpability standard of "guilty beyond a reasonable doubt". We have the concept of being "reasonable" at the core of our justice system for centuries and it works far more often than it fails. And certainly no one has come up with anything better.

      I'm also reminded of the last time Matthew Prince was locked in the horns of a free speech issue when there was outcry for Cloudflare to stop platforming Daily Stormer and Kiwi Farms. Sites that were claiming their free speech rights to not only spread hate, but to doxx and threaten and, by extension, chill the speech of people they disliked. Hence, free speech is not unlimited. Some speech restricts the speech of others. And then it is very much the responsibility of regulators to step in and make a judgment.

    • ako 20 days ago

      How do you know the end result is worse than disinformation? If the Russian disinformation allow Russia to destroy the freedom and democracy in Europe, and allow Russia to take over, that seems to me to much worse than limiting the publication of lies and slander.

      • mattmaroon 20 days ago

        Because whoever gets to determine what lies and slander are become your new dictators.

        If the problem is Russian bots, there’s a much easier way to solve it: make Facebook and the platforms that allow them to spread financially liable.

        You’re unironically arguing that giving up your freedom is a protection against losing your freedom.

        • saubeidl 20 days ago

          Hear me out, but: You can elect a commission of experts to be deciding this. Term limits. Separate independent institution from the government.

          That's not a dictator. You're just grasping for hyperbole to prop up an ideological point.

          • mattmaroon 20 days ago

            It’s called a jury. We have those. They’re the commission that determines if something is slander.

            • saubeidl 20 days ago

              Something doesn't need to be slander to be information warfare. We need something much larger scale and more powerful to fight back the hybrid warfare from Russia and increasingly also the US.

              • mattmaroon 19 days ago

                Is it possible that that belief is itself influenced by the propaganda you’re worried about? If I were Russia I’d do my best to create a rift between the US and Europe.

        • ako 20 days ago

          Freedom is a scale, not binary. I'm willing to move a bit on that scale to avoid going completely to one of the opposites. I completely disagree with your suggestion that if you don't have complete freedom, you're at the complete opposite end, I.e. zero freedom.

  • ThinkBeat 20 days ago

    The west have had various forms for this since before the internet, and certainly have huge efforts similar to what you list above, but have in general been far more productive than bots from the other side.

  • abc123abc123 20 days ago

    WTF? How are you attacked by russian accounts? This childish notion of thinking that only "true" thoughts are allowed under free speech, and the rest must be eradicated needs to die.

    If you don't like the risk of russian accounts, don't follow them, and follow accounts that you like. It's as easy as that.

    You have news, government news sites, journalists, newspapers, it's never been easier to find sources to trust and compare them against each other.

    Screaming murder because Sergei6778 says that Ukraine is evil is just stupid. Take responsibility for your own reading and mind, and stop using the law as a hamfisted tool to stop free speech. Take the bad with the good, or else there won't be any good left in the future.

    • vladvasiliu 20 days ago

      While I agree with your sentiment, it's more and more clear to me that reality doesn't reflect it. Many people are extremely easily influenced by easy to digest soundbites.

      I'm often baffled by the level of superficial and binary thinking even in "intellectuals" (as in people who hold degrees and you'd expect to have at least a modicum of critical thinking). More often than not it seems based on emotions.

      Now have these people spend most of their waking hours doomscrolling some echo chamber on tiktok, and I can see why some may be worried about the influence of some "bad actor".

      Given this, and the highly polarized political scene (and I'm in Europe!), I have to say I'm quite worried as to how things will unfold. Hell, there's no need for Sergei and his friends! Just the local politicians' popularity contest is enough.

    • robinkek 20 days ago

      We don't have freedom of speech for its own sake because of some inherent good. We have it because it's a useful tool to get other peoples perspectives and allows us come to more realistic conclusions where most feel included. People paid by the chinese or russian government are in complete opposition to that spirit.

    • bluescrn 20 days ago

      Note that it's always a claim of Russian (or maybe Chinese) propaganda. Never middle-eastern propaganda.

      The level of radicalisation over Israel/Gaza really doesn't look organic, when compared to the reaction to other conflicts.

    • saubeidl 20 days ago

      I don't like the risk of the mouth-breather next door reading Russian propaganda, it's not myself I'm concerned about.

      In a democracy, most people are unfortunately stupid and easily manipulable. We can't let the Russians (or the Americans!) use them as their proxy.

      • drysine 20 days ago

        So you want to censor what other people read? I don't think your neighbor would appreciate such patronizing attitude.

        • saubeidl 20 days ago

          I don't appreciate my neighbors letting themselves be manipulated to do me harm. I think it's time we do something about it.

          • drysine 20 days ago

            How are they doing you harm?

            • saubeidl 20 days ago

              Mostly by voting in extremists that destroy the institutions that we built and offer us as a prize to their foreign masters.

              • drysine 19 days ago

                Maybe they think that the current politicians are the ones who are destroying the Europe and it's you who is voting the wrong way?

                The part about "foreign masters" doesn't make sense to me.

                • saubeidl 19 days ago

                  Well yes of course they do - because they've been manipulated by said propaganda!

                  Maybe the part about foreign masters makes more sense with this context:

                  https://www.krone.at/3350333

                  https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/14/jd-vance-ali...

                  • drysine 19 days ago

                    You mean your politicians have created the migrant crisis because they were manipulated by Russian propaganda?

                    I still don't understand the "foreign masters" part. You mean other parties don't talk to foreigners?

                    • saubeidl 19 days ago

                      Your politicians have created the migrant crisis by fucking up the middle east - as part of the same hybrid warfare on our institutions as said propaganda.

                      Other parties don't have friendship treaties with Putins party.

                      • drysine 19 days ago

                        The US with accomplices invaded Iraq in 2003, NATO bombed Libya in 2011. Western politicians and mass media encouraged Arab Spring insurrections. All that led to the rise of ISIS among other things.

                        And yet oddly you blame Russia for "fucking up the middle east". Why? Have you considered the possibility that it's you who is a victim of propaganda?

                        >Other parties don't have friendship treaties with Putins party.

                        I'm sure other parties have friendships with the parties or institutions in countries other than Russia.

                        • dependsontheq 17 days ago

                          The European migrant crisis is mostly driven by Syria and the Sahel countries. Syria and Sahel are direct results of Russian military intervention, same with Lybia.

                          So you force a a migrant crisis and the spread information about the failings of liberal democracy... it's KGB basic training.

                          • drysine 17 days ago

                            >Syria and Sahel are direct results of Russian military intervention, same with Lybia.

                            Just curious, where did you get that idea? Free and independent Western media, I suppose?

                            Apparently, it's KGB who removed any mention of Russia from the Wikipedia article on Libyan crisis and added links to NATO bombing campaign.[0]

                            [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan_crisis

                        • saubeidl 19 days ago

                          Apologies, I thought you were American.

                          Then let me correct myself: Your government's American proxies messed up the Middle East.

        • Sabinus 19 days ago

          I don't want them unknowingly consuming foreign propaganda campaign content and maximally politically divisive conversation. Having spaces where identities are confirmed is really important for honest and open debate. Screaming at each other in Reddit and Facebook comments amongst society-fracturing influence campaigns isn't free speech. And if someone wants to leave the identity confirmed space and go yell in the anonymous sea of voices they can but we need other options.

          • drysine 19 days ago

            >I don't want them unknowingly consuming foreign propaganda campaign content and maximally politically divisive conversation.

            Good point.

            That's what Putin's "foreign agents" law addresses.

            The law is much criticized by Western media and "NGOs" for some reason.

            As a matter of fact, it marginalizes any recipient of foreign money even if they do something genuinely good for Russian people, but I doubt it is why the West doesn't like this law.

  • rayiner 20 days ago

    Europeans have compromised “democracy” in an effort to protect “liberal.” And that will unravel the whole thing.

  • torpid 19 days ago

    If you cannot tolerate “Russian bots” or “Chinese bots,” then you do not truly stand for free speech. It really is that simple. Free speech, by definition, exists to protect speech that someone finds offensive or objectionable. If everyone only said things that others agreed with, there would be no need for free speech protections at all. In a genuine marketplace of ideas, it is astonishing that anyone would claim the right to censor others, or to strip them of their humanity by dismissing them as mere robots or agents rather than people with sincere views.

    Yet we are increasingly binding ourselves (and even “authorized” bots) in chains of verified identity, deliberately suppressing anonymity. Imposing a “zero-trust” architecture on society inevitably leads to totalitarianism.

    The right to express ideas without personal attribution has always been a cornerstone of free speech and a free society. It is now being redefined and demonized as mere “bot activity.” While real bots certainly exist (as they have since the days of spam) many accounts labeled as bots are simply human beings who choose anonymity because they hold controversial opinions they do not wish to have traced back to them.

    Companies like Cloudflare are among the leaders in this shift by building frameworks ostensibly to monetize AI bot traffic. The consequence, however, is the effective end of online anonymity. When anonymity is forbidden, freedom itself disappears.

  • kevin061 20 days ago

    I see lots of disagreements here, but I must say I also soured on free speech. I used to think that free speech was necessary and overall a positive for society. Then I saw the Capitol attack in US. The disinformation spread in England about kids stabbed that led to riots. I see disinformation every day, especially from USA, saying Europe has no freedom, that it's overrun with criminals, and people not only believe it, but vote accordingly. This has to stop. Humans weren't trained to use rationality and reasoning every second of their life. Reason costs a lot of cognitive power so the brain implements a hundred shortcuts. For example: if you see something appear frequently, you assume it to be true. This is good for avoiding poisonous plants, but it's terrible when you go in Twitter and you're spammed with the same lies day and night. It's messing with us. Enough is enough. Free speech with guardrails.

    You should be able to insult and criticise the Prime Minister.

    You should not be able to gain a position of power and then go on a crowded stage to claim that vaccines cause autism. This is intolerable. We are attacking the foundations of society. People are not rational actors. Not you, and not me. We are very simple animals.

    • vladvasiliu 20 days ago

      I agree that people clearly don't use critical thinking 100% of the time and are easily influenced.

      But you're basically arguing for not criticizing the status quo.

      Many social improvements have been attained by "attacking the foundations of society". How would you like living under some absolute monarchy? How do you think gay people would like to live in a church-run society like 500 years ago?

      • tankenmate 20 days ago

        "But you're basically arguing for not criticizing the status quo.", but that wasn't what was argued ("You should be able to insult and criticise the Prime Minister."), but more your interpretation of what was said. You're making a strawman argument.

        • vladvasiliu 20 days ago

          Well, the PM isn't exactly the status quo, I wasn't replying to that. Rather, I was responding to this specific bit, emphasis mine:

          > You should not be able to gain a position of power and then go on a crowded stage to claim that vaccines cause autism. This is intolerable. We are attacking the foundations of society.

          Not sure when the strawman is. "The foundations of society", for me, means "the way things are". Which can be vaccines, sure, or any kind of general policy which has been showed to have a positive effect on society, but it can also be all kinds of things taken for granted which aren't necessarily rooted in reason.

          • Imustaskforhelp 20 days ago

            To be really honest, I share a similar stance to you overall but I would still admit that there is some partial truth to it

            I would like to expand this not only to foreign state actors that people mention but also companies inside which are actively trying to do nefarious stuff

            As an example, Tobacco industry knew that the damages were there but they still tried to spur up medical confusion around it all so that people would still think that medical discussion is going on when it was 100% clear that tobacco harms. Who knows how many people died

            The man who discovered that washing hands saved lives was so ridiculed and I think met with hostility because doctors couldn't comprehend the idea that it was they would could spread diseases. This is decades before germ theory was invented

            His name is Ignaz Semmelweis and the world was unjust to him. Doctors ridiculed and threatend him and he was labelled obsessive and doctors called it mere coincidence. His career crumbled as he was forced out of vienna/his hospital and his mental health deteriorated as his warnings were ignored

            in 1865 Semmelwise was commited to an asylum where he died just two weeks later at age 47

            Only after pasteur developed germ theory and lester pioneered antisceptic surgery, semmelwise was finally vindicated.

            This simple practise of handwashing is now considered the most basic medical standard worldwide saving countless millions of lives in the process.

            (I had to write it by hand here basically transcribing this really amazing video that I watched about such a topic, I would highly suggest watching it)

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBCOh1SYQYA (crazy people who were proven right)

            Semmelwise's stories can brings chills to spine.

    • techblueberry 20 days ago

      Yeah, I want to be more supportive of free speech, but I don’t think anyone is doing a great job of representing how to do it in the social media age. FIRE does a terrible job of it with mostly platitudes with no nuance.

      But one maybe counterintuitive reason I don’t like free speech absolutism in the social media era — one of the platitude’s of FIRE is like, “the answer to hate speech is more speech” and “I want to know who the racist are so I can avoid them.”

      1. The answer to nothin in this firehouse of speech in modern society is “more speech”.

      2. Part of the peace we used to have in society is I didn’t have to know about everyone’s political opinions. Loosely speaking maybe I thought small-town folk were close minded, but there weren’t tens of thousands of examples of it across feeds on the internet all day.

    • ricardobeat 19 days ago

      Those are not matters of freedom of speech, but the unhealthy amount of power social media platforms have come to possess. The problem is how they amplify and distribute disinformation because engagement = advertising money. Free speech does not (and should not) mean you get worldwide reach.

      Any platform distributing 'content' over a certain audience size should be treated as a media company and subject to much stricter rules and some kind of ethical oversight - like newspapers used to.

      • kevin061 19 days ago

        I can agree with that.

        Unlimited free speech could have been positive maybe 100 years ago. Strikes, protest, writing angry letters to your Mayor demanding change are all great forms of speech.

        Posting some unhinged xenophobic conspiracy theory on Twitter for everyone to see and to get retweeted by the President of the US or the most powerful CEOs are toxic and corrosive forms of speech.

  • Ikatza 20 days ago

    Freedom of speech is binary, there aren't any acceptable degrees of it: either you have it, or you don't.

    If there is disinformation, the solution is to counter it with actual information, to give the people better tools to identify it (like X's community notes), and to educate the general population so they will have better critical thinking.

    Restricting freedom of speech is never a solution. How long until dissenting opinions are censored because somebody labels them "disinformation"? Who watches the watchmen? etc.

    I'd rather live in a society with full freedom of speech and disinformation from State actors than have only 100% accurately vetted news.

    • lostlogin 20 days ago

      > Freedom of speech is binary, there aren't any acceptable degrees of it: either you have it, or you don't.

      That seems to be the American definition.

      We don’t all have binary systems for our views and politics, and some of our democracies are doing better than than US despite our apparent lack of free speech.

      • jnovek 20 days ago

        It’s not even the American definition. We have many exceptions, particularly using speech to cause violence or physical harm in various ways. I’m also confused by American free speech absolutists because that’s not a thing here and essentially never has been.

        Of course this is all hypothetical at the moment, as the current administration doesn’t seem to care much for the law.

    • Karuhanga 20 days ago

      Community notes typically kicks in after the tweet has already gone insanely viral. It’s not useless, but I wonder about its effectiveness.

      I see your point about free speech but I think it has to be more nuanced. For example, where has continuing stupid anti vaxer debate left the Americans?

    • pfdietz 20 days ago

      So, how do you feel about libel and slander laws? Don't they torpedo your binary framing there?

    • thefounder 20 days ago

      >> If there is disinformation, the solution is to counter it with actual information

      So what you argue is that we should build good bots to counter the bad bots right? and all this in a "secret" to avoid suspension by the tech companies. This looks like playing stupid games.

      The disinformation in this era can basically shadow any kind of legitimate "counter-disinformation". To make the game fair we would first need lockdown the internet content on citizen ID authorization so that we can identify if the free speach spread is actually published by a real person or some chinese bot pretending to be a single European mom with 3 kids.

      This is not something anyone wants so I think the current trade off of court orders to take down content is legitimate and the best approach. Cloudflare, the tech companies and US government likes the absolute free speech like everything else (i.e. free market) as long as it serves their interests. I wouldn't be surprised to see Cloudflare proudly repelling some "chinese propaganda attacks" and frame it like a cyber security win instead of anti-free speech action.

  • budududuroiu 20 days ago

    > In Europe we are under daily attack from Russian accounts that spread massive amounts of desinformation, deep fakes, just emotional appeals with the goal of destroying liberal democracy.

    The disinformation campaigns have always been there, the reason they're growing roots in the mind of the average European is because the EU is spending it's razor thon political capital on things Chat Control, Digital Omnibus which are wildly unpopular.

    Isn't it a bit ironic that in order to protect "liberal democracy" you need to reach out for authoritarian suppression?

    • dependsontheq 20 days ago

      Yes we need to restrict the freedom of non citizens to influence our debates. And we need to have rules how digital platforms can influence our internal debates, we had this rules for TV and newspapers. That's not suppression thats's defense.

      • budududuroiu 20 days ago

        How do you restrict the freedom of non-citizens without restricting the freedom of citizens too?

        My parents and grandparents didn't fight against the Romanian authoritarian regime for reading of confidential communications to come back under a EU banner instead.

        The EU is more of a threat to itself than Russia is, the only reason the "Russian propaganda" has teeth is because the current bureaucrat class in the EU Council have outlived their Mandate of Heaven

        • whilenot-dev 20 days ago

          For me, it's a matter of authenticity at scale...

          Let's assume I want every citizen to navigate the web freely while fighting propaganda machines as much as possible, so that means I want an automated system that creates the set difference between these two in real-time, as reliable as possible. To create such a system, and since there shouldn't be any overlap in these two sets, I can effectively put my efforts in half if I put my work in the detection of one such set.

          The scaling problem, as I see it here, arises from the following: While the set of individual citizens (kind of) has an upper limit, represented by the number of internet users worldwide, the botnet nodes in propaganda machines do not. I can limit the set further, for example if I want to focus on the citizens that are part of my government only, whereas propaganda machines can come from anywhere on the globe. Internet users already need to provide a proof on authentication for quite a lot of services, while botnets generally want to avoid being identified as such.

          While I'm far from in favor of Chat Control, I can somewhat understand why these initiatives are in motion at all.

          > The EU is more of a threat to itself than Russia is

          To put it mildly, this conclusion is non-sequitur at best.

        • tankenmate 20 days ago

          "The EU is more of a threat to itself than Russia is"; it can be easily argued that this is only the case if democracy has little value because in Russia democracy does indeed have little value (let alone life, etc).

          "Democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time"

          So the EU and the EC are big lumbering organisation that make poor decisions; but then people make poor decisions day in day out. But just because you *feel* disaffected doesn't mean the system is inherently wrong (unless of course you believe that politics' primary, if not only, purpose is to make you "feel good(tm)").

          It's probably far more accurate to say that wealth inequality is the EU's biggest threat and that "the elites" (which is more than just senior politicians and bureaucrats) don't feel the pain of inequality and so aren't internally motivated to do much about it (culture eats strategy for breakfast, etc etc).

    • StrauXX 20 days ago

      The average person in Europe does neither care about chat control, nor have they heared more about tgan one or two surface-level news articles. Russian propaganda being more and more effective and these actions are not related.

      • budududuroiu 20 days ago

        Russian propaganda is effective because the EU leadership has dropped the ball so hard that the Kremlin looks attractive. People aren't as stupid as you think

  • 762236 20 days ago

    That isn't a Russian. It is me, an American. It is convenient for you to dismiss my arguments as Russian so that you can ignore their validity. The same thing happens in the US: people dismiss arguments by saying they are right wing (i.e., from Republicans)

  • raxxorraxor 20 days ago

    To be honest, I think this argument is FUD as well. There are some Russian accounts and there is disinformation, but this isn't the core of polarization in western democracies and Europe in particualr. And reigning in free speech is even poison in this situation, which is more complex than pointing your finger at bots.

    In Europe freedom of speech is under threat from its own population, which is more and more driven by fear. This fear might not be unreasonable and has multiple sources, but it remains a bad basis for decision or policy making.

  • bambax 20 days ago

    Not just Russia and China. Musk does Nazi salutes and Grok promotes pedophilia. Trump invades countries and talks about taking over Greenland, which is part of Europe. The US are no less of a threat than Russia.

    Contrary to widespread belief, Europe has the means to fight those threats. It just chooses not to, for reasons I don't understand.

    • randomNumber7 20 days ago

      Most europeans are completely delusional.

      Look at germany for example (where I'm from). Shutting down nuclear power plants and coal at the same time.

      More than 50% of people here still tell you this is necessary to save the planet - even though what we save is so little globally, that it does nothing relevant to stop global warming.

  • qcnguy 20 days ago

    Interesting how now the list has expanded to include Chinese "bots" and "actors". Calling anyone who disagrees with your political beliefs a foreigner is an old and extremely paranoid, nasty rhetorical trick. Very similar to the people who call everything they dislike racism.

    The polls don't lie and they show that there are hundreds of millions of people all over the west who just flatly disagree with your whole ideology. The unity you imagine would exist if not for shadow accounts doesn't exist, and it's delusional to believe it does.

    No no. Just accept that you're a totalitarian dictator at heart, embrace the warmth of just being evil publicly, without pretense or obfuscation. "Silence the opposition!" you cry.

aforwardslash 20 days ago

Regardless of whether the law is absurd or not (I honestly have no idea, but we've seen some crazy stuff lately in the EU), its kinda precious that a CEO only complains about it when his company is fined.

I'm certain it is also quite reassuring for any paying Cloudflare customer that the company strategy is driven by the CEO Twitter rants; That if by some reason doesn't want to play ball with local laws (as draconian as they may be) and the company is fined, his public reaction is threatening to leave the country. Its not the first time he does this, and certainly it won't be the last. This communication style gets old fast, and IMO this actually hurts the company - I'm a free tier user and would never subscribe any paid products. I think their tech is amazing, they surely have great engineers, but I don't feel comfortable financing a company that thinks it is above the law.

The icing on the cake is the plea for a free internet; You know what a free internet looks like? A network that doesn't make half its content inaccessible because someone in a major company did a mistake on a SQL query. Or a network that isn't controlled by a company that basically just said "we're tight with the US government, so f** your laws".

  • Illniyar 20 days ago

    He did mention that they were fighting the law before they were fined and they plan to challenge the fine in court. He has also been vocal about other similar legislation before they were enacted or the company got fined (not sure about this specific one though).

    So I don't think it's fair to characterize it as he "only complains about it when his company is fined".

    • troyvit 20 days ago

      He also said this:

      > In the meantime, we remain happy to discuss this with Italian government officials who, so far, have been unwilling to engage beyond issuing fines.

      which, although his rant really pisses me off, further proves your point.

      • rediguanayum 20 days ago

        He's giving Italy and Italians fair warning that he will abandon the Italian market to avoid being subject to their laws, and I think it will go that way. I guess it's up to the Italians to find a replacement.

        • h33t-l4x0r 20 days ago

          Find a replacement global edge network and get the rest of the world to use it?

          • its-kostya 20 days ago

            Can't have a global edge network without also being a big player - something Cloudflare is disliked for. You're suggesting everyone move to a new provider, so we can dislike the new vendor instead?

          • cteiosanu 20 days ago

            At least 2 major competitors have good enough global edge networks.

      • DangitBobby 20 days ago

        Why does his rant piss you off?

        • whatthesmack 20 days ago

          Likely because it mentions JD Vance and the current US administration in a positive light, since they have rightly shone a bright light on the active decline of free speech in Europe.

          • troyvit 19 days ago

            Thanks for answering for me but you got it wrong. Believe it or not other people can be as nuanced as the CEO of Cloudflare.

      • mlrtime 20 days ago

        Curious, why does his rant piss you off?

        • troyvit 19 days ago

          I've had the pleasure of working for CEOs who don't resort to public threats (or all caps) to get their point across. When I chose who leads me or who I work with stability and consistency are key. This just sounds like a man who thinks he can flex his way out of a problem and that is just such a short sited way to solve problems. Not my kind of CEO.

          • xvector 18 days ago

            Why shouldn't they resort to strongarming? Italy literally wants to blacklist IPs at whim for the entire planet. Cloudflare CEO is 100% in the right to strongarm them. Who do these people even think they are, to censor the planet's DNS?

            • aforwardslash 14 days ago

              They are not censoring the planets dns. Cloudflare is a private company that provides dns resolution and it must comply with the local laws of the multiple places it engages in business with.

              Just like every other company. From italian isps to vodafone to google.

              What makes cloudflare so special?

  • csallen 20 days ago

    > financing a company that thinks it is above the law

    I've never liked arguments like this, because laws are often complex, unreasonable, and unjust, and all of us (both individuals and companies) routinely use our best judgment to decide which laws to flout and which to follow, and when, where, and why to do so.

    • jauntywundrkind 20 days ago

      For real. Laws likee anti-circumvention laws are a horrible plague on humanity. There's all kinds of nonsense & so often businesses have far too much sway or outright grasp over the legal system.

      You can't be a hacker without having any Question Authority backbone or will. You don't have to be full onboard but very few nations seem capable of behaving at all reasonably when it comes to technology. And few even have the chance to do right: American corporate empire has insisted countries adopt particularly brutal ip laws for decades, and made trade contingent upon it.

      The Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace & Doctorow's recent talk on the EU needing their own break for Cyberspace & IP Independence are both important revealing materials here. https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence https://media.ccc.de/v/39c3-a-post-american-enshittification... https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46420951 https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence

    • aforwardslash 14 days ago

      Yes i offered a simplification, but reality is often nuanced. But, if you are in business, you accepted the terms and profited from them; Im not disputing how stupid or far-fetched the law is - Im just pointing out the child in the room.

      If it is as the rant describes, every other company operating in the italian market has also to accomodate this; where is the rant from the other CEOs? From the telecom providers? From the VPN endpoints?

    • oaiey 20 days ago

      I share that perspective. Being an international company is a challenging thing regards law. You have to operate in best intent, and judges respect that.

      And sure, some laws and most likely this one, are stupid. I always take GDPR as an example. Annoying as fuck, but a good regulation. Well written, well executed and hits its goal.

      However, disrespecting and being tone deaf in communication is wrong, ignoring the intent (Italian based legal control of IP violations) is wrong and treating the Internet as a legal free space (or only accept US perspective) is wrong. Italy is a sovereign state and the Internet is operating there and on its citizens. It has all right and duty to do so. We have to respect that.

      • DangitBobby 20 days ago

        It feels good to see someone give a giant middle finger to corruption.

      • tick_tock_tick 20 days ago

        > And sure, some laws and most likely this one, are stupid. I always take GDPR as an example. Annoying as fuck, but a good regulation. Well written, well executed and hits its goal.

        It's funny people normally use GDPR as an example of a law so poorly written and implemented that the sites of the very EU governments that passed it are still not in compliance a decade later.

  • yibg 20 days ago

    Style aside, what do you think he should do? Faced with a law that not only imposes disproportionate fines (more than revenue from the country), but on the surface also requires blocking globally, there are really only a few things to do:

    1. Challenge the law in court

    3. Influence the law via political means

    3. Try to sway public opinion so 2. may be easier

    4. Give in and play ball

    5. Exit the country entirely

    • sumedh 20 days ago

      > Challenge the law in court

      Do the courts in Italy work or do they do what the govt wants them to do.

      • blacklanzer 20 days ago

        The government complains everyday about the judges and it's trying to make a referendum to make judges angry, so I wouldn't say courts do what govt says

      • kubb 20 days ago

        Yes, the judiciary is an independent branch in Italy, alongside the executive and the legislative.

    • wmf 20 days ago

      It looks like he skipped 1 and 2 and went straight for option 3. I wonder why that is.

      • Wyverald 20 days ago

        how ever did you reach that conclusion? For 1, his tweet literally says "That, of course, is DISGUSTING and even before yesterday’s fine we had multiple legal challenges pending against the underlying scheme." 2 is something that happens behind the doors, and it's rather uncharitable to just assume he skipped it.

        • wmf 20 days ago

          That's fair, but he also didn't give any specifics. If Cloudflare is suing Italy there should be some documents we can read.

    • aforwardslash 20 days ago

      What did the other major companies do?

  • mlrtime 20 days ago

    When I read this I was thinking that I'd be grateful for the CEO of a company I worked for to write this.

    As long as they don't go off the rails like Musk and others have, its good to see them pasionate and fight for the company. The reverse is MUCH worse.

  • tuwtuwtuwtuw 20 days ago

    What is an example of a crazy law from EU?

  • cteiosanu 20 days ago

    This 1000x times!

  • nhinck3 20 days ago

    Crying free speech and attempting to rile up the tech bros is just what companies do these days.

    It doesn't matter if, like this issue, it has absolutely nothing to do with free speech; if you position yourself as a defender of the "open internet", "open source", "free thinking" or "innovation" you get every dingleberry that hangs off Musk to come and defend you.

    • flumpcakes 20 days ago

      American free speech as of 2026 includes openly threatening to invade European territory unless it is given away.

      It's funny how America can force it's own crappy content protection laws to the entire globe, but another country can't have their own.

      The current administration is burning good will to America with it's allies at an alarming rate. This isn't good for stability or world order. I think this year is could be a contender to be the worst one yet of this millennium as we find other despots empowered by America's actions.

  • ryan_n 20 days ago

    > I don't feel comfortable financing a company that thinks it is above the law

    Of all the companies to make that claim about in 2026, Cloudflare would not be very high on the list I would think... Also, hopefully you're not paying for any genAI services and making that statement?

pop_calc 20 days ago

The appeal to JD Vance is properly craven and validates the view that their business model is effectively a protection racket.

Recall the unsavoury episode with taviso, when they lobbied the FTC to investigate him after he helped clean up their mess during Cloudbleed. They always pivot to aggression when challenged.

  • kentonv 20 days ago

    > when they lobbied the FTC to investigate him

    FYI Cloudflare didn't actually do that: https://x.com/eastdakota/status/1566160152684011520

    (Disclosure: I work at Cloudflare but have no personal involvement with this.)

    • ta9000 20 days ago

      Right. I guess we’ll have to take his word for it.

      • kentonv 20 days ago

        Not sure if my word is any better but I wouldn't be working for him if I thought he was the kind of person who harasses security researchers.

  • hodgesrm 20 days ago

    > The appeal to JD Vance is properly craven and validates the view that their business model is effectively a protection racket.

    It's not craven, it's a mistake. It needlessly antagonizes the market at large to solve a smaller problem. I don't see how this benefits Cloudflare in the long run unless they've decided to throw in their lot with the current US regime. If so, what happens when that regime changes?

  • PUSH_AX 20 days ago

    How is CFs business model a protection racket?

    • oaiey 20 days ago

      JD Vance business is a protection racket. That is how I read it

  • idopmstuff 20 days ago

    I mean I dislike JD Vance as much as the next guy, but I don't see how it's unreasonable to appeal to the federal government for assistance in dealing with international legal issues. That's very much in the government's remit.

    • croes 20 days ago

      Lawyers are for legal issues.

      Do you call your government if you get a fine in a foreign country?

      Unless it’s life threatening I doubt that.

      • Alupis 20 days ago

        You do when the fine is more than double your annual revenue in the foreign nation, has international and geopolitical implications, impacts many other US businesses, could harm foreign relations, and will harm regular US citizens.

        That's exactly the type of thing the Executive Branch is supposed to deal with.

        • oytis 20 days ago

          Executive branch is supposed to deal with other countries' laws and courts? Does it also hold for European executive branches and American laws? I don't want to even imagine a world that works like this.

          • fc417fc802 20 days ago

            > Does it also hold for European executive branches and American laws?

            Yes, if a US law is overreaching and directly impacting people in the EU. That is literally how the world works in practice so I'm not sure what to tell you.

            • oytis 20 days ago

              CLOUD act is overreaching and impacting people in the EU. What EU governments are doing is avoiding US-based cloud services for critical applications, because it's an US law, not a European one

          • adastra22 20 days ago

            It’s called diplomacy.

        • Pedro_Ribeiro 20 days ago

          Do people not understand that companies on this scale are geopolitically important?

          • oaiey 20 days ago

            Thank they should act like it and respect the laws of the countries.

            If you run to the US executive to assert US understanding of law onto other countries you are geopolitical important, however, as a tool for the US national interest not as a true international company. A true international company would serve their customers in their legal systems. Fight the laws there, try to make them better, but don't strongarm them with other country forces. They are a sovereign country.

            • pavon 20 days ago

              When a country is trying to impose extra-territorial laws, then it goes beyond enforcing their sovereignty, and it is completely reasonable for the affected to request diplomatic intervention.

              • itsyonas 20 days ago

                Surely I don't need to point out the irony of complaining to the US government about another country wanting to impose extraterritorial laws?

                • xvector 18 days ago

                  Whataboutism. What do you expect Cloudflare to do about the US imposing extraterritorial laws? How is that in any way relevant to their dilemma at hand?

                  • itsyonas 18 days ago

                    "Whataboutism" is being overused to the point of meaninglessness. It describes deflecting criticism by raising an unrelated issue. I did not do that. I did not avoid a question or dodge the criticism. I just pointed out an irony.

              • oytis 20 days ago

                It would be nice if we had an international agreement on how to apply sovereignity on the internet without infinging on sovereignity of other countries. US would be in a great position to initiate this if the current administration had any understanding of what "international agreement", "sovereignity" or "other countries" means.

              • oaiey 20 days ago

                Well the law is surely addressing European/Italian citizens and business. If you serve them from the US and target Italians for financial gain, you are no longer extraterritorial because you operate there as a business.

                • pavon 17 days ago

                  Italy has authority over what Italian companies or subsidiaries are allowed to do, and they have authority over any operations that foreign companies have within Italy and any dealings that foreign companies have with Italians or others in Italy. They do not have authority over foreign companies operating in foreign countries serving foreign customers, just because that company also does business in Italy. That is extraterritorial, and is what this law is requiring by demanding that Cloudflare remove DNS entries worldwide.

              • croes 20 days ago

                You mean like the US with it's sanctions that prevent European countries getting payments per credit card or Paypal when they sell Cuban products?

              • Hamuko 20 days ago

                Has Trump considered bombing Italy and kidnapping Meloni yet?

            • ta9000 20 days ago

              Italy should have no right to take a website off the internet globally, which from what I’ve read this allows them to do. That’s insane.

              • oaiey 19 days ago

                They have all right to sanction or restrict a company which has a legal footprint in their territory.

                When you are incorporating as a company in a country you are subject to their laws. Period. If that includes rules how you act worldwide, than that is a part of it.

                Do not get me wrong, restricting free speech or apply IP law outside your territory is IMHO not right for a country to do.

          • dandellion 20 days ago

            Maybe that's the way it is in the US, because the country is run by corporations. But in the rest of the world we don't operate like that.

            • xvector 18 days ago

              This is objectively false. You're telling me ASML isn't geopolitically important? That TSMC isn't geopolitically important? We are likely to enter a war for the latter within the next decade.

          • Quothling 20 days ago

            Why would Italy pick Cloudflare over Bunny.net or even CDNetworks if Cloudflare can't follow their laws? Today US tech products sell well in Europe because of the past 80 years of positive relationships. So Cloudflare is the obvious choice over CDNetworks, but for how long will it be like that?

          • tag2103 20 days ago

            The Italians obviously don't

          • croes 20 days ago

            Geopolitical important companies are a bad thing. Imagine the company being an Iranian or North Korean company.

            That's one countries leverage against another countries laws.

          • oytis 20 days ago

            I mean, that's an argument for making them respect your country's laws or banning them from your country if they don't want to.

          • jacquesm 20 days ago

            They're not.

        • oaiey 20 days ago

          When the risks are too high, then exit the market. When you do business in a market, adhere to the laws there.

          It is however the business of governments to foster harmonized (globalized) markets. But the US has killed so many regulations and collaborations in the last year, that there is little hope that this will improve any time soon. They do not want globalization anymore but American first. Reactions of other countries will be higher fines, more regulation and higher entry barriers.

          • stinkbeetle 20 days ago

            > When the risks are too high, then exit the market. When you do business in a market, adhere to the laws there.

            And when you want help to improve your terms of trade, you can petition your government to assist.

            > It is however the business of governments to foster harmonized (globalized) markets.

            It is the business of governments to further the interests and wishes of their people.

            > But the US has killed so many regulations and collaborations in the last year, that there is little hope that this will improve any time soon.

            Is Italy's actions here fostering "harmonized (globalized) markets", I wonder?

            > They do not want globalization anymore but American first.

            If globalization is what Americans want, then that is what their government should be accommodating. If it's not, then the government should not.

            Even if "the experts" think something is right or wrong, even if some economic factor or other might objectively improve with a particular policy, it should be up to the people to decide. Self-determination is one of the most fundamental human rights there is, too often ignored by the ruling class.

      • idopmstuff 20 days ago

        Well first off, generally if you are arrested in another country you would in fact call your government. Most people do this, and it'd be foolish not to. If you get sued for a large amount of money or defrauded or face any number of other issues, also reasonable to call your government.

        Anyway, not a great comparison because you're talking about legal regulations governing speech on the internet. This isn't a jaywalking ticket, it's a deeply complex regulatory issue involving politics, law and international relations. It's also an issue that the current administration has shown interest in, so if you're an affected American business it would be pretty foolish not to seek help there.

  • shwaj 20 days ago

    I’m not sure whose business model you’re referring to, Cloudflare or Trump/Vance? Or sounds like the former, but I’m not sure how that appeal “validates the view…”.

  • Aeglaecia 20 days ago

    while the spirit of your statement is clear , i dont think its 'properly craven' to recognise both an individual's faults and their strengths - in this case the author goes to lengths to state he does not necessarily agree with either musk or vance. has anybody successfully recieved protection from this US administration while acknowledging fault of said administration ? from outside this doesnt seem likely as US politics is currently operating like team sports (ie. no tolerance of toeing party lines, 'youre either with us or against us')

bflesch 21 days ago

Not a good look on that guy to list his "pro-bono" services and threaten to pull them while asking JD Vance for his help.

How is he expecting the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics to influence some representative of media right holders who have fined Cloudflare? Is he assuming that just because all of the listed things are Italian they can just make the fine go away?

  • iamnothere 21 days ago

    This is taking place in a larger geopolitical context. He is applying whatever pressure that Cloudflare can apply on its own (not much), and he mentions Vance as a way to call for US administration help at a time when the US is entering an open economic conflict with Europe. Tech and speech regulation is a central feature of that conflict.

    IMHO this is a time when there are no good players. I support CF’s fight to keep the internet open against encroaching EU regulation while also acknowledging that the US has been a recurring bad actor here. I am not as anti-Cloudflare as some (I have no problem with their pro free speech policies) but I do think centralization of infrastructure is a bad thing, and CF encourages that.

    • brightball 20 days ago

      Wasn't 1.1.1.1 explicitly created to help people in countries with government internet restrictions to get around them?

      100% support whatever Cloudflare has to do to win this fight. IMO the timing of something like this in the middle of the Elon + X vs UK censorship fight with the current administration providing support is probably the best case scenario.

      People aren't going to want to hear that, but in this case it's probably true.

      • greyface- 20 days ago

        > Wasn't 1.1.1.1 explicitly created to help people in countries with government internet restrictions to get around them?

        No, it was explicitly created to receive and study the stream of "garbage traffic" being sent to 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1, which were previously held by APNIC and donated to Cloudflare on this basis. https://blog.cloudflare.com/announcing-1111/

        > APNIC's research group held the IP addresses 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1. While the addresses were valid, so many people had entered them into various random systems that they were continuously overwhelmed by a flood of garbage traffic. APNIC wanted to study this garbage traffic but any time they'd tried to announce the IPs, the flood would overwhelm any conventional network.

        > We talked to the APNIC team about how we wanted to create a privacy-first, extremely fast DNS system. They thought it was a laudable goal. We offered Cloudflare's network to receive and study the garbage traffic in exchange for being able to offer a DNS resolver on the memorable IPs. And, with that, 1.1.1.1 was born.

        • jp57 20 days ago

          By these quotes, it was created to serve "a privacy-first, extremely fast DNS system", and the service of help in studying the garbage traffic was offered in exchange for gaining controll of the address(es).

    • bflesch 21 days ago

      "It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt."

      I think this clearly shows the hubris of Cloudflare CEO. Cloudflare is simply not important enough in Europe, and he unnecessarily provided a scapegoat "evil US tech company" for European media and politicians to slaughter. In terms of corporate politics it's not clever for him to attach his name to this issue, why not let legal handle this through EU lobby channels the same way other US tech companies do it in Europe.

      • sroussey 20 days ago

        Cloudflare should just block Italy altogether.

        • anthk 20 days ago

          Add Spain with LaLiga on top too. Inb4 "the CF CEO it's a right winger", so it's the Soccer -LaLiga- CEO.

      • foxglacier 20 days ago

        His hubris isn't news. Remember when he woke up in the middle of the night and blocked some website because he personally didn't like it?

        • bflesch 20 days ago

          No, haven't heard that story. Can you share a source?

          • lkbm 20 days ago

            I suspect this is referring to the removal (not block) of The Daily Stormer in 2017[0].

            [0] https://blog.cloudflare.com/why-we-terminated-daily-stormer/

            • lkbm 20 days ago

              Oh, there's also Kiwifarms in 2022: https://blog.cloudflare.com/kiwifarms-blocked/

              • lostlogin 20 days ago

                Was anything of value lost?

                Seriously, what good has ever come out of that cess pit.

                Yes, that’s a stance that is playing with fire. But is it wrong?

                • lkbm 20 days ago

                  I'm not saying it is. I think there's a pretty broad agreement that those sites are bad, and less of them is good.

                  It's much less obvious that we want private corporations (or governments) picking and choosing which sites are good or bad. And from Cloudflare's position, a policy of "we don't police content" is more defensible than "we don't police content, except of this one in particular". These definitely aren't the only two horrible, racist websites Cloudflare has hosted.

                  IIRC (and take this memory with a grain of salt), one thing that angered eastdakota about Stormfront was that they kept saying something like "Cloudflare hasn't kicked us off, so they're okay with us" or something like that. And obviously that doesn't hold water, unless Cloudflare has chosen to kick of some sites, it lends some credence to the remaining ones.

                  I'm undecided where I stand on it. I'd like them to take actions like this in a principled way. (And I'm happy to accept that there's no clear line to draw, nor that it can be enforced with 100% accuracy, but if you're drawing a line, do it thoughtfully and broadcast it so you know ahead of time if you're in their gray area.)

                  • foxglacier 18 days ago

                    I think most people do want governments picking and choosing. Governments have accountability through elections and roughly represent what the population wants. Corporations have skewed ideas of good and bad that aren't usually very representative. Government blocking might be a problem for Americans with more puritanical ideologies because they also have the freedom of speech in the constitution but most other countries aren't encumbered like that and many do block all sorts of morally deviant content.

    • simianparrot 20 days ago

      The good players are the US on this front. I say this as a European. Europe at large is in a dark place in terms of freedom of speech, the press, and other issues like immigration. And the US might eventually have to be the ones to apply force to hold our leaders accountable, ironic as that is given history.

    • hermanzegerman 20 days ago

      "Tech and speech regulation is a central feature of that conflict"

      The only conflict is that Europeans don't want Russian Misinformation and Manipulation from foreign powers onto them. It's no accident that Musks X serves preferentially content from European Far-Right Parties.

      The US used the same argument for their TikTok-Ban/Forced Takeover. They also don't make a secret out of their plan to push the far-right to end the EU. They even wrote about this in their new National Security Strategy

      Pure Hypocrisy

      • joe_mamba 20 days ago

        >They also don't make a secret out of their plan to push the far-right to end the EU.

        How is the "far right" gonna end "the EU"? When my GF walks alone at night through the parks she's never EVER afraid of the mythical far right for her safety, but the other people the far left won't let us talk about without being called a label and being cancelled from MSM for having common sense opinions.

        So if the EU were to find its end, it will be 100% at the hand of its own making, from years of corruption and financial mismanagement, from years of pushing unpopular open borders far left policies that nobody was asked it they agree with them or not. That's what will end the EU. Not Musk, not X, not Putin, not Trump, but the EU bureaucrats and their unpopular policies who then use boogiemen like X and "russian misinformation" and "far right" as scapegoats to deflect from their failures like this:

        Corruption being exposed on X? Must be Russian misinformation. Illegal migrant crime exposed on X. Must be far right misinformation. Epstein Files? Democrat hoax. Etc but you get the point.

        Politicians hate accountability and media channels they can't control like X that risk exposing their mistakes and corruption. They want full control of media to tell you what's acceptable to think, since the internet and social media made traditional state controlled media obsolete. They don't want control of social media and user ID verification to "protect the children", they want it to protect themselves from criticism and accountability from you.

        It's not Elon's or Trump's or Putin's or the far right's fault the healthcare in my country has been on a decline for 10+ years. It's not their fault wages are stagnating but property prices are skyrocketing which is what most voters care about. That's the fault of the ECB fiscal policies. It's not their fault public safety is down and crime is up. That's the fault of EU border control and irresponsible migration policies. Etc. you get the point.

        So it's disingenuous at best and bad faith at worst, to ignore these long going systemic issues the EU has self inflicted on its voters, and just blame the far right for the backlash it has inevitably lead to.

        • Kelteseth 20 days ago

          You're making it sound way more dramatic than it is [1]. And yes X is a far right echo chamber that twists the narrative so that the extreme right get the most support out of it. X is the biggest help for foreign power to sow discord among us [2]

          [1] https://www.dw.com/en/crime-statistics-knife-crime-drugs-lif...

          [2] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj38m11218xo

        • immibis 20 days ago

          I'm sure you understand the fact that an alliance of countries is not held together by the absence of serial killers hiding in parks at night, yeah? Europe has rather famous historical knowledge of what the far right can do, and how it can destroy a country, and it has nothing to do with parks at night.

          • joe_mamba 20 days ago

            >Europe has rather famous historical knowledge of what the far right can do, and how it can destroy a country

            Since you brought up European history, let me ask you where the far right came from in WW2 Europe. Did they just suddenly come out of nowhere and manage to take over a continent just like that without having majority popular support amongst the population? Or was it an organic growth gaining political support feeding off the backlash to failed policies of previous administrations in Europe?

            Because history is repeating itself right now and you're either not seeing it because you don't know the answer to the historial question above, or you are ignoring it because you don't like it and you hope the solution lies in draconical measures against far right parties as if that will magically to turn all those displeased citizens to stop supporting far right, and not making it worse by radicalizing them even further leading to more extremism which is what is actually gonna happen.

            You're basically creating a self fulfilling prophecy with this attitude of putting all the blame and focus of state failures on the far right.

            > and it has nothing to do with parks at night

            It 100% has everything to do with that. Because if you import millions of potentially dangerous and culturally incompatible people from dangerous low trust societies into (formerly) safe European high trust societies, against the will of the majority of your voters making them now feel unsafe in their own countries, and you refuse to backtrack on your unpopular policies, then voting far right is the only peaceful and democratic option the voters have to express their displeasure with your policies.

            And you can only ignore, ban and suppress the demands of the far right parties for so long, until they become the majority of the voter base, and then you're fucked and the prophecy you were trying to stop fulfills itself, the far right takes power and uses all the political weapons you built to suppress them against you. Just like 80 years ago.

            Like I said before, people are doomed to have history repeats itself on themselves because people never learn, or they learn the wrong lessons due to ideological biases giving themselves a false sense of moral superiority over the others they disagree with.

            You see this societal failure on HN as well, with my comments here getting flagged even though they didn't break any rules and haven't been factually proven wrong via debate, yet people will reject and try to silence them them without arguments or debate, same as they reject the other views that don't conform to their bubble.

            • TRiG_Ireland 20 days ago

              Most of the big names campaigning against immigration are themselves credibly accused of sexual assault. We can see through your mind games.

              • lmz 20 days ago

                Even if that is correct. It only means they have enough domestic supply of that kind of person, and there is no need to import more.

              • joe_mamba 17 days ago

                Care to elaborate without moving the goalposts?

    • lostlogin 20 days ago

      > the US is entering an open economic conflict with Europe.

      Whilst ending swathe of agreements, threatening to end NATO and threatening to attack a NATO territory.

    • aforwardslash 20 days ago

      > he mentions Vance as a way to call for US administration help at a time when the US is entering an open economic conflict with Europe

      This is a great way of bombing its business in the EU. Just sayin' :)

      • lagniappe 20 days ago

        This is not as much of a flex as you appear to think it is.

        • aforwardslash 14 days ago

          Look at amazon. They just announced their sovereign cloud offering. That's how you do business, and that's how you stay in business - you dont threaten your customer base.

    • pamcake 20 days ago

      I may have missed something but Akamai seem to be living proof that it's possible to operate that kind of business at scale from the US without vice signalling or publicly sucking up to fascist authoritarians.

    • jacquesm 20 days ago

      CF is a US company, the EU has the right to make their own - misguided - laws. And CF has the option to simply stop doing business with Italy, or comply with the law. This stupid grandstanding is just a thinly veiled attempt at blackmail which I'm sure will very much impress the legislators and the judges of the country to which it is addressed. /s

  • troyvit 20 days ago

    I'm a team lead in an American organization that relies heavily on Cloudflare's Project Galileo[1], and I read that post with growing dread. My first thought was that this guy doesn't sound very much like a CEO. Let me rephrase that: He sounds like the kind of unhinged CEO of orgs I try to stay away from (X, for instance).

    Then I read what you're talking about:

    > [...] we are considering the following actions: [...] 2) discontinuing Cloudflare’s Free cyber security services for any Italy-based users; [...]

    That's punishing all of Italy's users including those whose job it is to call truth to power (Project Galileo is free for journalists). If my state had a similar spat with Cloudflare would we be in danger of losing the infrastructure we've grown to depend on?

    I was complacent and we need to re-think our relationship with them. It's true what they say: there's no such thing as a free lunch.

    [1] https://www.cloudflare.com/galileo/

    • tokioyoyo 20 days ago

      He has a point about why they would they offer a country services, when the country fines them more than their entire revenue in the said jurisdiction.

      • troyvit 20 days ago

        I agree, and I'm really split about a lot of this, because screw this ~blackmail~ extortion AGCOM was trying to pull. The only thing I'd say is that a country is more than a department, and these actions will hurt others who had no influence on AGCOM's decisions far more than it'll hurt AGCOM directly. Maybe it will create pressure against AGCOM and force them to back down.

        But as a middle manager of a small nonprofit who makes decisions for my org's web infrastructure I have to make sure our organization's infra doesn't become part of a bargaining chip in a future conflict between a giant company and our government.

        • bflesch 20 days ago

          The act of threatening unrelated customers just because they are in the same country is extremely stupid.

          Businesses might not care whether he tweets at JD Vance or Taylor Swift, but the risk of having your website shut down because the CEO of your firewall vendor has a psychological breakdown on Twitter is unacceptable.

          It is Friday evening in Europe and the fact that Cloudflare leadership and Cloudflare legal team couldn't put out a statement to mitigate this situation within the last 5 hours shows that this guys could run the company into the ground within blink of an eye.

          Remember, some weeks ago Cloudflare had an outage because of an extremely stupid engineering mishap, today it is an extremely stupid leadership mishap. How many more strikes should they be granted?

        • jules 20 days ago

          If Italians have no influence over AGCOM, then who does?

        • HDThoreaun 20 days ago

          Cloudflare has very limited leverage here. Punishing the entire country for the actions of their elected government in hope of protest is about as good as they can do other than hoping Trump does something crazy. Every italian citizen has some say over their governments actions, even if they dont support them.

    • adastra22 20 days ago

      When you fine a company more than the entire revenue they get from your nation, they will pull out. It is not retributive. What is hard to understand about that?

      • itopaloglu83 20 days ago

        Folks tend to forget what private enterprise is and think these companies have to provide these services like their government's public service.

      • troyvit 19 days ago

        That is an important perspective. I was looking at it from the angle of cloudflare's overall revenue, not their revenue from just Italy. I think if he would have said that in his post it would have been much more powerful.

    • xdennis 20 days ago

      > That's punishing all of Italy's users including those whose job it is to call truth to power

      Cloudflare is a business. If the fines for operating are several times the money it can get from Italian users, why should it stay in Italy at all?

      It's like when Wikipedia went dark for a day. It punished all users, but the point is to show that politicians are forcing it to do so.

    • chmod775 20 days ago

      > If my state had a similar spat with Cloudflare would we be in danger of losing the infrastructure we've grown to depend on?

      Absolutely. And if any of their competitors claims they can guarantee that they won't ever (have to) pull out somewhere for political reasons, they're lying or ignorant. You cannot escape politics. One election or new law can redraw the landscape overnight.

      Also I doubt you "depend" on any single SaaS product where you're completely at the mercy of another company. There's probably nothing that you couldn't swap out in a pinch.

      • troyvit 19 days ago

        Sure but we're a nonprofit operating on shoestring budget, and given that we've had a web presence since the aughts without having to deal with CEO temper tantrums says a lot about where this kind of attitude stands. If you think somebody who runs an international company is behaving appropriately by bitching and threatening on twitter than I fear for your infra more than I fear for mine.

      • jkman 20 days ago

        Exactly, I can't believe the braindead takes being spouted on this thread. Is HN really filled with people that can't think critically the second they leave their terminal?

    • amitav1 20 days ago

      Cloudflare's job is not to call truth to power. Cloudflare's job is to make money.

    • halapro 20 days ago

      Voglio vederti ricevere una multa di 14 milioni di euro e rimanere diplomatico

  • fph 20 days ago

    It is not unrealistic at all. The Olympics are run by politicians, essentially, since they appoint the committees, make the investments, build the infrastructure.

    And the ones pushing for these bans are the sport media tycoons: this fight isn't about Anna's Archive, it is about people watching soccer illegally. Because that is where the real money is.

    • oaiey 20 days ago

      Yeah correct. I hate this so much in this topic. I hate the disrespect for the law in this topic here but he is right here. The Olympics, soccer and all the other sports (but also other billionaires businesses) have to be put back in their place. How is FIFA able to prevent me from drinking my favourite beer in the city center of my favourite town just because world cup is on town.

      • fph 20 days ago

        Another legitimate complaint is how much police force is deployed each week in and around stadiums. The public pays the costs for security, big soccer gets the profits.

  • throw0101d 20 days ago

    > Not a good look on that guy to list his "pro-bono" services and threaten to pull them while asking JD Vance for his help.

    I think it's worth noting the quotes around the pro-bono. As outlined by Matthew Prince (Co-founder & CEO, CloudFlare):

    > Bandwidth Chicken & Egg: in order to get the unit economics around bandwidth to offer competitive pricing at acceptable margins you need to have scale, but in order to get scale from paying users you need competitive pricing. Free customers early on helped us solve this chicken & egg problem. Today we continue to see that benefit in regions where our diversity of customers helps convince regional telecoms to peer with us locally, continuing to drive down our unit costs of bandwidth.

    * https://webmasters.stackexchange.com/a/88685

    * Via: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42712433#unv_42712845

    It is not charity but a business decision that benefits them.

    • itopaloglu83 20 days ago

      > It is not charity but a business decision that benefits them.

      Of course it benefits them, it's a private enterprise, not a local government providing trash service.

      No one also can force them to provide such a service, try to control their global operations which is outside of Italy's jurisdiction, and if they're not making any more they can pack their stuff and leave.

  • everfrustrated 21 days ago

    It seems the panel that fined him is politically appointed so seems reasonable to reach for politics to attempt to fight/resolve it.

    • oaiey 20 days ago

      The panel is backed by a law. Respect the law. Italy has a judicial system and in cases like this, probably some EU court could be also called. US politicians can reach out to EU/Italian politics to harmonize trade... But wait, do not we kill trade deals. They are so unfair (aka. compromises)

  • Hikikomori 21 days ago

    Was with him in the first part, then wtf. Vance and the others dont stand for free speech either, it's only their own speech that matters and they'll proudly ban anything else.

  • grayhatter 21 days ago

    He replies to an Italian user

    > We can’t offer free services in a country that fines us millions unreasonably. Fix your government or lose access to our charity.

    On one hand, I agree with you, it's problematic to threaten collective punishment. However, I don't think it's unreasonable to "divest" from a country trying to fine you for behavior outside of said country. It's also important to communicate that clearly, and unfortunately bluntly. Did you have a different expectation or suggestion for what they should do?

    • plagiarist 20 days ago

      Well, for example, from what you quoted:

      > We can’t offer free services in a country that fines us millions unreasonably.

      This is normal and reasonable.

      > Fix your government or lose access to our charity.

      This is petulant and smug.

      My suggestion for what they could have done differently is have a PR team handle the public announcements.

      TBF what they did here is probably more effective than my plan, but only because the world is a trash fire.

    • bflesch 21 days ago

      I think it is a big strategic mistake for him to personally take ownership of this topic and to elevate it on a political level. He openly aligned himself with two people who are extremely unpopular in Europe, while threatening an important EU member state.

      I think his hubris makes him overestimate Cloudflare's importance for Europe. Cloudflare is simply not important enough. If it was Microsoft or Apple threatening, then maybe - but those companies are clever enough to leverage lobbying for this.

      Now the Cloudflare CEO has set himself up to be at the whims of JD Vance/Trump, while providing a perfect "arrogant US tech company" scapegoat that can be slaugthered by European politics and the media conglomerate that he is threatening.

      Europe is too important for USA. I don't think the US administration will like the relationship to go sour at this very point in time just because of this Cloudflare doofus barking around.

      Anyways, it is like Facebook CEO and Amazon CEO applauding the Trump inauguration; it is a totally unnecessary political statement which fragments their userbase and introduces a political dimension to any procurement decision involving Cloudflare. It takes people's illusion that Cloudflare is a neutral tech company and replaces it with this guy's twitter ramblings, who is obviously an Elon Musk and JD Vance fanboy.

      • grayhatter 20 days ago

        > it is a totally unnecessary political statement which fragments their userbase and introduces a political dimension to any procurement decision involving Cloudflare.

        My take was, If you need help from the current State Department, or the current administration, (and I assume they do) it absolutely is a necessary statement. And then, this is them trying very hard to suck up, as is required, without pissing off everyone.

        Perhaps I'm wrong, and this is actually a form of honesty, instead of performative theater. In which case I would probably agree with you. It's unfortunate. But I default to the assumption that people aren't children by choice.

        • NewJazz 20 days ago

          Then why bring up Musk, who is perhaps more reviled than even Vance?

      • tacker2000 20 days ago

        I agree, he seems to be ranting and escalating unnecessarily.

        • jules 20 days ago

          The are fining his company 213% of yearly Italian revenue. He is not the one escalating.

          • oaiey 20 days ago

            He took a risk in ignoring a law instead of exiting the market. They did not escalate, they applied the law.

            What we need is an international legal framework for the Internet. And that includes compromises on all sides. China, EU, Russia, US and others have very different understanding on what is right. But hey, I think US politics is America first and cancel all international treaties. Sounds like more problems like this are incoming.

            • jules 18 days ago

              I think it would be more effective if US establishes deterrence against punitive fines of its companies.

            • jkman 20 days ago

              Sure, next we should implement global communism and live in peace and harmony forever! That is most definitely feasible

      • throw0101d 20 days ago

        > Europe is too important for USA. I don't think the US administration will like the relationship to go sour at this very point in time just because of this Cloudflare doofus barking around.

        When you say "for USA", what do you mean by "USA"?

        Are you talking about the general US population? US corporations? Or the person who decides foreign policy direction (i.e., Trump)?

        Because Trump recently ordered the snatching of a foreign head of state because he didn't like how the guy danced and allegedly didn't take him seriously.

        • bflesch 20 days ago

          I was trying to say that even though the US administration is actively escalating with Europe, I don't think the point in time has been reached where they want to go full berserk and cut Europe off from services by US tech companies. Cloudflare CEO tries to trigger such an escalation right now, but I'm not sure the US administration wants this kind of escalation right now, because it would also accelerate migration away from Microsoft and other US tech companies, hurting their revenue. For FAANG $7M is peanuts, and they won't leave billions on the table just because Cloudflare CEO has a big ego.

      • user34283 20 days ago

        Musk and JD Vance are not "extremely unpopular in the EU", they are primarily unpopular with progressives, regardless of the location.

        It sounds like you're just upset the Cloudflare CEO sides with conservatives on this particular issue.

        • sidibe 20 days ago

          Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but they are, in fact, extremely unpopular in EU

          • user34283 20 days ago

            You believe Musk is unpopular with conservatives in the EU?

            • sidibe 20 days ago

              Overall he is very unpopular. There are a few far right parties that love him but they are outnumbered.

  • wmf 21 days ago

    Politics tends to work that way.

  • x0x0 20 days ago

    Cloudflare really is all in on "we happily host pirate sites and tada, they're not in your country so we'll do nothing about it at all."

  • resonious 20 days ago

    Is there some more context then the original post? All I see is CF CEO saying that Vance agrees with the idea that these laws are bad.

  • tyre 20 days ago

    1. Vance built a lot of support in Silicon Valley.

    2. Tech donated to Vance (and Trump) under the understanding that they would be a protected class.

    3. By tagging Vance publicly and directly, he’s calling a favor.

    4. If Vance doesn’t take action, it’s a signal that he’s not worth investing in.

    • OkayPhysicist 20 days ago

      > Vance built a lot of support in Silicon Valley.

      That's a polite way of saying Thiel successfully installed a puppet as the heir apparent to the most powerful position in the world.

      • pelorat 20 days ago

        The USA was always on the path on becoming a corpocracy, not a democracy. Musk/Thiel and their puppet JD Vance has cemented it.

  • satellite2 20 days ago

    Exactly, his whole tirade felt extraordinarily far fetched, sketchy if not outright racist.

pluralmonad 20 days ago

I think maybe I should seek out AI art for awhile. I know this is where everything is going and I'm tired of cringing so hard every time one of these AI gen'd images is used in a serious way. But that image at the bottom of the tweet makes the entire post seem less serious to me.

  • fuddle 20 days ago

    Yes I thought the same. I thought the post was making a good point, but the image just undermined the seriousness of the post, as it characterized Italian politicians as zombies. It made me think less of the author.

  • plagiarist 20 days ago

    Attaching a little cartoon at the bottom makes it extremely childish, no "seem" about it.

gkoz 20 days ago

A person praising Vance and Musk obviously doesn't value due process, judicial oversight and ultimately decency.

  • Dylan16807 20 days ago

    Please don't make everything into us versus them.

    Also that paragraph is very critical as far as praise goes.

    • NicuCalcea 20 days ago

      > don't make everything into us versus them

      Why not? There are real people out there who wish us harm, are we supposed to just take it?

      • Dylan16807 20 days ago

        Rejecting the system, everyone in it, and everyone that's willing to interact with it, is not a way to get good outcomes. No don't "just take it" but encouraging one of the good opinions of the vice president is fine.

        • NicuCalcea 20 days ago

          I disagree, some systems are so bad they need to be rejected outright. As a European, I find asking for the help of Vance and Musk as hostile, even if the person asking is in the right.

          • 1dontnkow_ 19 days ago

            He is not asking Vance for help as an individual but the position he has for the country the company is headquartered in. What would you expect? They cant go and ask a random country for help on a complicated geopolitical issue. You are supposed (maybe required) to contact officials from your country and relevant agencies and institutions.

            I'm not the biggest fan of the US Administration currently either but if a company asks them for help, they're doing what you're supposed to do, and they shouldn't be labeled as bad or sharing the view of the current administration.

            • NicuCalcea 19 days ago

              I don't see how a representative of the executive and an oligarch of one country have any say in the legal matters of another. You either comply with the laws of the country you operate in, or you get out, it has nothing to do with the president of the country your HQ is in.

          • reassess_blind 20 days ago

            What would you have them do instead? Honest question.

            • luke5441 20 days ago

              At the very least don't complain about it publicly. Using diplomatic channels I think things like this can quietly go away. But if you make it an issue in the public court of opinion people usually support their own democratically elected government compared to the increasingly hostile foreign regime.

            • staplers 20 days ago

              If an actor asked Harvey Weinstein for help, I would think less of them. End of story.

            • speedgoose 20 days ago

              Not ping them?

            • NicuCalcea 20 days ago

              There are legal avenues in any jurisdiction to contest decisions that you believe are unfair. Running to the (vice-)president and your oligarch friends is just weak and makes you look like the bully.

              • 1dontnkow_ 19 days ago

                Hm, I'm trying to keep an open mind here so help me:

                Why exactly would that be weak? Given the resources and connections it needs, wouldn't it be actually very strong? Also, I'm from EU, and nobody in their right mind sees Italy as the victim. The politics in Italy gave gone insane and they are a huge example of a fuck up as a whole country. Also the EU, is trying to push censorship law and most companies in EU are fight with everyone they've got to not let them pass and organize petitions and what not.

                Also are you all people supporting this law and the fine or do people, for some weird reason, have started to hate Cloudflare and letting their emotions cloud their judgement? Lets forget Cloudflare for a moment and imagine just another company... Would you still agree entirely on this laws contents and the procedures and fines issued? Lets please all focus on the important topic here. Companies come and go, but destructive laws keep us suffering for decades on end, maybe forever.

                • NicuCalcea 19 days ago

                  It's weak because people who are connected to power don't need to have a meltdown on a public forum and beg for help.

                  I have no feelings about either Cloudflare or Italy. I doubt I've thought about Cloudflare for more than 5 seconds at a time before this. I also am not informed enough about this particular issue, some types of censorship are good, others are bad.

                  That's all besides the point though, the point is that a multi-billion dollar corporation is demonising (as in, actually posting AI slop of Italians as demons) legitimate European authorities and publically asking a bully government to coerce a smaller country into submission.

    • oaiey 20 days ago

      You are right. But there is a point here that international harmonization and compromise is a solution here. Which is not exactly a strength of an America First policy.

    • pelorat 20 days ago

      Elon/Thiel/Miller are the de-factory leaders of your country, and Trump and Vance are their puppets.

  • g947o 20 days ago

    The "free speech" argument worked in his favor this time, so... Let's see if he still uses this card the next time something inconvenient comes up.

  • davidguetta 18 days ago

    On the other hand, ad hominem arguments are never a mark of intelligent thinking.

  • goshx 20 days ago

    I agree. Musk calls for "free speech" while censoring his own AI and manipulating elections. There goes my respect for this CEO.

    • Hamuko 20 days ago

      Maybe the free speech he was thinking of was Grok dressing people in microbikinis. I think that's Elon's favourite free speech too.

  • j-krieger 20 days ago

    And yet this is the only thing people seem to focus on in a discussion about a government agency without any of those attributes.

  • financetechbro 20 days ago

    His argument of “free speech” has zero meaning when “shouting out” JDV and Elon. What a joke of a CEO

Sol- 20 days ago

His tone and sucking up to his authoritarian government will probably only serve to negatively polarize Europe against Cloudflare, even if he might have a point of the substance itself.

skilled 21 days ago

https://xcancel.com/eastdakota/status/2009654937303896492

  • Aeolun 20 days ago

    Thanks. I was looking for that at the top, but had to scroll down all the way here to find it.

1vuio0pswjnm7 20 days ago

Cloudflare CEO threatens to pull out of Italy and to stop offering free "cybersecurity" to its residents

Would this mean Italian websites would be free from Cloudflare "bot protection" or whatever marketing name is used for those annoying "Checking your internet connection..." interstitials

  • pred_ 20 days ago

    One thing it should mean is that anyone using Cloudflare is doing so while risking that its CEO suddenly pulls the rug and closes down the service; not a dependency you want in your stack, and not a great look for a service that's supposed to be usable as a stable high-availability one.

    • Aeolun 20 days ago

      I’m sure they’d give you several month to migrate off (and make noise to your government).

      I can honestly see why you’d want to stop giving stuff for free to people taking your money.

  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 20 days ago

    HN does not use a "Just one moment..." Cloudlfare interstitial

    It seems to do just fine without it

    HN does not require Javascript or use of a particular client to request and read its HTML. I use an HTML reader (offline) with no suupport for auto-loading resources, images, JS, CSS or DNS "prefetch" nonsense

    The Cloudflare "protection" against so-called "abuse" forces www users to enable Javascript and use a client that exposes them to increased risks, including risks to their privacy and quiet enjoyment of the web

    It cannot tell the difference between (a) a single reguest from a single IP address by a www user who prefers a client that is not distributed by an online advertising company or an online advertising company's business partner and (b) so-called "abuse" such as an excessive number of requests, sometimes from many IP addresses

    For the purposes of "protection", it considers (a) and (b) the same

    CF's "solution" is to force the www user to choose a particular client that puts the www user at risk and exposes them to surveillance and advertising, and surreptitious data collection

    "Solve" a problem by creating a new, additional problem

  • jeroenhd 20 days ago

    The alternative to the "checking your internet connection" page for many websites is either "508 Resource Limit Is Reached", "Please click all the boxes with traffic lights", or no website at all. They're not there to bully you, they're there to protect websites from abuse.

  • stickfigure 20 days ago

    Sure, at least the ones that survive DDoS attacks will be.

    • luke5441 20 days ago

      They can use an European alternative like bunny.net. It's cheaper anyway.

Arbortheus 21 days ago

I agree with the CEO, while also feeling a bit nauseous at the MAGA Musk suck-up at the end - I suppose this is the game you have to play with this current administration.

  • rpdillon 20 days ago

    Yeah, it's weird. I don't like the law in Italy, Cloudflare, or the current US administration, but I'm fairly anti-censorship, so I feel compelled to side with Cloudflare unless more info comes to light.

  • deadbabe 21 days ago

    It really doesn’t matter what administration is in charge, at a certain level you have to curry favor with whatever administration is in power and hold your true motives close to your chest. People seem to think what people say in public is perfect knowledge of their true intentions. No. What they say is what they want someone to hear them say. There is nothing to gain by saying what you really feel, no one can prove it’s what you really feel anyway.

    • ben_w 21 days ago

      Yup.

      Plenty of activists on the other side of the spectrum note of "greenwashing" and "pinkwashing", nice words about the environment or LGBT+ rights without any noticeable action beyond adding a temporary pride badge to social media accounts in pride month or a picture of a wind turbine on their website.

    • NewJazz 20 days ago

      Yeah well nobody glazed Biden or Kamala's dicks that hard.

    • miltonlost 20 days ago

      You really don't have to praise fascists.

anticristi 21 days ago

This is great news! Who would have expected Cloudflare to truly contribute to EU digital sovereignty.

On a more serious note, I'm surprised Cloudflare wants to pull out of Italy. Being a company which terminates TLS connections for Italy must be a gold mine for the NSA.

  • linkregister 20 days ago

    Cloudflare and other US tech companies base business decisions on revenue (and apparently on emotion), not allegiance to government agencies that have fallen out of fashion.

  • bflesch 20 days ago

    Yes, it is good for Europe that US tech leadership comes out in the open and share their twitter ramblings, so nobody can deny that their interests are not aligned with us.

  • halapro 20 days ago

    Claiming to and following through are two different actions, lots can happen between the two.

Foxboron 21 days ago

So blocking Kiwifarms took.. months of activism and loud complaining. Heraled by Matthew as "this is an extraordinary decision for us to make and, given Cloudflare's role as an Internet infrastructure provider, a dangerous one that we are not comfortable with".

However a fine that amounts to ~0.7% of the annual revenue and they threaten to block an entire country?

  • ExpertAdvisor01 20 days ago

    Actually, the fine amounts to over 200% of Italy-sourced revenue ($17 million fine vs. $8 million in revenue in 2024). Why would you continue doing business in Italy?

    • Foxboron 20 days ago

      They are a conglomerate and per Matthews words "an internet infrastructure provider". Why does the local revenue matter when they are serving a global market?

      EDIT: And fwiw, "Why would you continue doing business in Italy?" is not what is being proposed. They are threatening to block 55 million people from ~20% of the world wide web.

      • tekacs 20 days ago

        They're threatening to remove servers from Italy. They're explicitly NOT threatening to block Italians from being able to access sites through Cloudflare.

        I have my fair share of problems with CF, but I assume here that they're threatening higher latency (i.e. requests from Italian users would have to go to a neighboring country to be routed) rather than blocking.

        • NewJazz 20 days ago

          Also Italy would see (very slightly) lower GDP because data centers would have less demand from CF.

          • NorwegianDude 20 days ago

            How freaking expensive do you think infrastructure is? It's not that expensive, and certainly not anywhere close to the point where it would make a noticeable impact on GDP.

            • NewJazz 20 days ago

              Every little bit counts. At cloudflares scale it could be the difference between a DC having to close up shop or not.

      • bhelkey 20 days ago

        > EDIT: And fwiw, "Why would you continue doing business in Italy?" is not what is being proposed. They are threatening to block 55 million people from ~20% of the world wide web.

        There is no mention of blocking people in Italy from using sites protected by Cloudflare. From the tweet:

        > we are considering the following actions: 1) discontinuing the millions of dollars in pro bono cyber security services we are providing the upcoming Milano-Cortina Olympics; 2) discontinuing Cloudflare’s Free cyber security services for any Italy-based users; 3) removing all servers from Italian cities; and 4) terminating all plans to build an Italian Cloudflare office or make any investments in the country.

      • ExpertAdvisor01 20 days ago

        If they do not want to comply with introducing censorship, then withdrawing from Italy is the only other option. Italian citizens and residents are unfortunately collateral damage.

      • ExpertAdvisor01 20 days ago

        Because they only violated the "law" in a local market (Italy) .

        • Foxboron 20 days ago

          And the correct response to that is to write up a threat towards the entire population of a country?

          • bluecalm 20 days ago

            What else could they do? The government represent the country. If their business model is not welcome there then they withdraw. It's very fair to say "if you insist on those rules I choose not to play". They owe Italy nothing.

            Btw, I recently "threatened" Switzerland to withdraw my business from there because the cost of doing business there (complying with their VAT regulation) is higher than my revenue from there (maybe 1-2 licenses a year). The whole Switzerland will not be able to buy my software because of that. I didn't think of posting about it on Twitter though.

            • Foxboron 20 days ago

              > What else could they do? The government represent the country. If their business model is not welcome there then they withdraw. It's very fair to say "if you insist on those rules I choose not to play".

              They can just not threaten the population of Italy? They are a 2 billion dollar company that has apparently scheduled a meeting with the vice president of the US on short notice? This is going to be resolved politically.

              > Btw, I recently "threatened" Switzerland to withdraw my business from there because the cost of doing business there (complying with their VAT regulation) is higher than my revenue from there (maybe 1-2 licenses a year). The whole Switzerland will not be able to buy my software because of that. I didn't think of posting about it on Twitter though.

              You have not given "free services" to 20% of the world wide web that you are now using as leverage.

              • yibg 20 days ago

                Politic is not separate from the population though. Pressure from the population (hopefully) sways political decisions. This is why google news pulling out of countries were public.

              • Moldoteck 20 days ago

                how would you not threat? Are you willing to donate $ for cloudflare to operate there with such fines?

          • StrLght 20 days ago

            It absolutely is. Why should people receive a free service while their democratically elected officials enact laws that enable them to target global revenue in their fines?

          • Aeolun 20 days ago

            Not the whole population. Only those using cloudflare to protect their websites?

    • Hamuko 20 days ago

      How much revenue did Kiwifarms bring in?

  • renewiltord 20 days ago

    Yeah that makes sense to me. If you come up to me and say “you have to arrest that guy; he’s stealing from me” I have to do a lot of research to make sure that everything is correct.

    On the other hand, if I see you steal from me, I don’t have to do a lot of research. I am a first party to the thing. I can be sure.

    It’s the difference between a policeman arriving on the scene of an assault and someone actually assaulting the policeman.

    The acting party being the affected party simplifies things because you know you’re not a “confused deputy”.

  • Illniyar 20 days ago

    He isn't threatening to block Italy, just to remove cloudflare's business from there. Anyone living and surfing from Italy would not be blocked by cloudflare from accessing any service provided by cloudflare.

  • simianparrot 20 days ago

    How do you not understand the difference..?

  • pessimizer 20 days ago

    > So blocking Kiwifarms took.. months of activism and loud complaining.

    Kiwifarms isn't a pirate site. It's just another site that you think is legitimate to censor.

    > However a fine that amounts to ~0.7% of the annual revenue and they threaten to block an entire country?

    What's going to be next weeks fine? Of course they should block the entire country. Even if they pay the fine (I could imagine there's some way that the EU could force that on pain of forcing them out of Europe), they should block the country.

    Shouldn't Italy want lawbreakers to leave?

  • Alex2037 20 days ago

    >activism and loud complaining

    I'm not sure why would you want to remind the world about that episode. those men lied, stalked, harassed, and threatened a lot of people to get that perfectly legal website exposed to very illegal DDoS attacks.

0x_rs 20 days ago

The appeal to an open internet from Cloudflare to Elon and Peter Thiel's stuffed toy is evidence this is not about freedom of speech but a political game. The AGCOM requests are inane and the so-called "Piracy Shield" sponsored by sports team corporations currently eyeing VPNs needs to go and those responsible for it must pay, but this doesn't make this right, either. And the current USA "cabal" isn't shadowy, rather right up your face, mocking you every day.

perfmode 20 days ago

Matthew Prince’s framing of Italy’s action as a “free speech assault by a shadowy cabal” is rhetorically exaggerated, but his underlying concerns about due process have legitimate basis—confirmed by EU Commission criticism of the same system.

The reality is more nuanced than either party presents: Italy is enforcing an aggressive copyright protection regime with documented implementation flaws, while Prince is strategically reframing an anti-piracy dispute as a censorship issue and overstating US administration support for his position.

elAhmo 21 days ago

[flagged]

  • dang 20 days ago

    Please don't cross into personal attack or name-calling, and please don't take HN on generic ideological tangents of flamewar tangents.

    You may not owe $CEO better but you owe this community better if you're participating in it.

    All of this should be clear if you've reviewed https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html recently.

  • t8sr 21 days ago

    I read the tweet twice and I don’t see any mention of free speech. What he’s describing, when you look past the rhetoric, sounds ridiculous: a single medium sized country is demanding power to institute global blocks of content on the internet? If that’s an accurate description, that’s deeply concerning for the long term viability of the internet.

    • undeveloper 20 days ago

      > And in this case @ElonMusk is right: #FreeSpeech is critical and under attack from an out-of-touch cabal of very disturbed European policy makers.

    • miltonlost 20 days ago

      Read the tweet a 3rd time. Free Speech is mentioned in Paragraph 4 when he's thanking Vance and Musk. It's highlighted in Blue. It's a Hashtag.

    • blibble 20 days ago

      seems perfectly reasonable for a country of any size to exercise this sort of power within their own borders

      the US constitution doesn't apply worldwide

      if Petulant Prince doesn't like it: he can leave

      • t8sr 19 days ago

        Emphasis on global blocks. Meaning everywhere in the world.

    • tacker2000 20 days ago

      He is mentioning Vance and Musk as beacons of democracy and free speech.

      • Dylan16807 20 days ago

        Did you and I read different tweets?

        "While there are things I would handle differently than the current U.S. administration" and "in this case @ElonMusk is right" are not how you talk about beacons.

    • DetroitThrow 20 days ago

      Please read the entire tweet. Free speech is mentioned at character number 1779.

    • bflesch 20 days ago

      I cannot believe this is the first time that Cloudflare has been confronted by a local government which asked to perform "global" filtering of content. It is clear for anyone who has worked with bureaucrats that their "global" means "within our jurisdiction". It is extremely weird that he feels emboldened to publicly lash out like this and pull in people who are extremely unpopular in Europe.

      • rpdillon 20 days ago

        You keep saying this, but 'global' has never meant 'in my jurisdiction' in any conversation or document I've ever read. What additional information can you provide the confirms your interpretation is correct?

  • j-krieger 20 days ago

    > obviously an idiot praising Vance's and Elon's actions

    He praised their opinions on free speech. You should be able to differentiate a single opinion objectively from the people holding them.

    • 90788d3a 20 days ago

      He actually praised Vance role as a defender of democratic values, but Vance is known to deny Greenlands souvereignity, ready to capitulate to a russian dictator, indifference to police killing a protester recently, etc.

      His idea of free speech does not include critical reporting. The wider US government is trying to shut down the BBC with a lawsuit or has public officials threaten individual journalists to their face, basically nothing is too large or too small.

      • j-krieger 20 days ago

        > He actually praised Vance role as a defender of democratic values, but Vance is known to deny Greenlands souvereignity, ready to capitulate to a russian dictator, indifference to police killing a protester recently, etc.

        Horrible stuff. I agree. His statement about free speech in the EU, when removed from him as a person, is still true. Progressive media sources agree [1]. If both aisles, as well as European free speech activists, think something is going horribly wrong in Europe, we should listen.

        [1]: https://www.thetimes.com/world/europe/article/germany-insult...

  • anthk 20 days ago

    In Spain the LaLiga CEO, Tebas (Soccer association, they are legally fighting against Cloudflare and doing MITM's everwhere) isn't very different in that case (Francoist far right supporter).

  • romanhn 20 days ago

    Oof, Cloudflare has been one of the most interesting tech companies for me, and one I would have worked for in a heartbeat. But the MAGA pandering in this tweet is quite disappointing. I get it, running a large business in the US these days requires a certain amount of bootlicking, but still. And I say this while generally agreeing with Matthew's stance.

    • bflesch 20 days ago

      The "haters" who long ago have warned about the risk of Cloudflare MITM'ing global website traffic have been proven right. In the end, Cloudflare is another mass surveillance tool next to Meta/Google/Apple which will be weaponized in the interests of the current US administration.

  • babelfish 20 days ago

    I hope people go take a look at previous statements by MP/JGC (to be fair, no longer affiliated) with this in mind - I have always found them to be just as degrading and whiny as this announcement reads.

  • fzeroracer 20 days ago

    Every time any of these CEOs see even the mildest of pushback, the mask just fully falls off and you see them immediately run to the worst people on the planet.

    • bflesch 20 days ago

      I feel for his chief legal counsel who must be crying in their office right now. In the US, courts have been deactivated for MAGA-aligned rich people, but Cloudflare CEO is so stupid to assume that the same has happened in Italy. The arrogance and ignorance is astounding.

    • lm28469 20 days ago

      Nobody gets to these positions unless they're a complete sociopath who've long lost touch with reality. Just listen to anything thiel, musk, altman, vance and other degenerates have to say, some animals display more humanity than these golems

Nux 20 days ago

Started reading the post on Cloudflare's side, but halfway through I ended up against it.

It's a little bit scary that guy is the CEO, his post sounds crazy and unprofessional.

The fact he's posting on X to begin with is a warning in itself.

  • azangru 20 days ago

    > The fact he's posting on X to begin with is a warning in itself.

    Why so? The counter at the bottom of the post claims that it has been viewed 7.5 million times. I don't know how this translates into individual people; but still, probably a decent reach?

    • pornel 19 days ago

      It's not about reach, but about not seeing a problem in being a member of Elon Musk's website.

      • gck1 19 days ago

        Which social network would you choose if you wanted reach?

        There isn't any that isn't run by questionable people.

      • azangru 19 days ago

        People are there for reach. Politicians, celebrities. Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Jeremy Corbyn, Keir Starmer, Kaja Kallas, Ursula von der Leyen... If they don't see a problem, why should the Cloudflare CEO?

register 20 days ago

This follows 23—again, 23—violations reported to Cloudflare. There is nothing more to add. Given how slowly Italian law typically moves, Cloudflare had more than enough time to take corrective action. The tone would likely have been far more accommodating had Cloudflare attempted to contact the authorities and negotiate its position. Instead, it appears that, in all likelihood, nothing was done after 23 violations. What exactly was the CEO expecting?

  • cm2012 20 days ago

    23 violations of an unjust and unworkable law. The law is bad and should go.

    • monkaiju 20 days ago

      Fair enough but thats not up to cloudflare to decide, if they operate in the country they must respect its laws

      • Nemo_bis 20 days ago

        We don't know what the law is. The rules were created with an administrative procedure backed by a very generic statute which is likely unconstitutional. Neither the Supreme court (Cassazione) nor the Constitutional court have ruled on the matter yet.

        Getting a fine is the first step towards further judicial review, probably.

      • Moldoteck 20 days ago

        so CF is clear - if the law is not changed they'll leave italian market. That's fair

        • register 20 days ago

          And he is more than welcome to do so. The services provided by Cloudflare can easily be replaced by more local providers that have no problem complying with Italian laws. The takedown might not happen within 30 minutes, but there would still be action and a response to a report from the authorities. Italy and Europe do not need the arrogance of those who believe they are above the law by virtue of a freedom that is used only as an ideological shield. As if Trump were really the champion of freedom, right?

          • Moldoteck 18 days ago

            Lol, CF can be replaced just as easily as Microsoft office suite. At best you get a subpar service. And EU bureaucracy is to blame here

          • solenoid0937 18 days ago

            > Italy and Europe do not need the arrogance of those who believe they are above the law

            Italy and Europe do not have the right to censor the internet for the rest of the world.

            Cloudflare is not "arrogant" to threaten pulling out of Italy if fined 2x their revenue in the country.

            I would argue that "arrogance" is some tiny vacation destination thinking they can censor the planet ;)

          • tylergetsay 18 days ago

            how can the services of cloudflare be easily replaced if I require you to go through cloudflare to access my site?

cfabuses 20 days ago

Cloudflare is a haven for abuse.

Most large scam groups now have their own ASNs and IP registrations, so CF just forwards them the report and tells you to contact fiberscam.co.za or whatever fake company the scam group has created. They are not cut out for this workaround and yet the largest scam groups have been using it since 2023.

I don't think they are currently doing any statistical analysis, one provider has just 3 /24s and hosts thousands of scam shops, hundreds of reports to CF and nothing done, they won't consider blocking the ASNs even when you show them a report that 98% of the IPs they own serve scam shops.

At this point I consider CF willfully negligent.

oytis 21 days ago

Rhetoric is somewhat off, but I have to use 1.1.1.1 to access Anna's Archive from Germany, so he has a point.

anonzzzies 20 days ago

Is this, like in Spain and some other countries, all basically focused on blocking illegal sports streaming? Especially soccer. I have a friend who runs a fairly large forum (aka a lot of user content including links to illegal things) in Spain who gets letters about 'Illegal streaming links to movies, TV shows and sports' with a list of links; he knows he only has to remove the sports, they do not give a crap about illegal US show streams locally and US requests go to /dev/null as they cannot enforce anyway. So I assume this is only about streaming sports as well?

  • itopaloglu83 20 days ago

    It's all a racket to extract money from Italians, not enforcing IP rights.

    Just like it's mentioned in Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu, some organizations are designed to extract resources from masses. Italian loves soccer and some big shots managed to get the TV rights for a per-pay service, and that's why they're pushing for so hard. Otherwise I don't think Italian courts would go after people selling pirated DVDs on the streets of Milan.

amai 20 days ago

The americans get here a dose of their own medicine. An IT related law with global reach. One of the first of this kind was actually created by the US itself with the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CLOUD_Act Now they complain that other countries do the same to them. Somehow I can't feel sorry for them.

pannolino 20 days ago

I am just translating this from https://www.agcom.it/sites/default/files/provvedimenti/delib....

"In its memoirs, Cloudflare also states that its services: “do not give rise to the transmission of content on the websites of service users; [...] do not allow Cloudflare to know, control, or modify in any way the content of the websites, which always remains available on a third-party web server regardless of its services.”"

:)))

> In addition, we are considering the following actions: > ... > discontinuing Cloudflare’s Free cyber security services for any Italy-based users

jimnotgym 20 days ago

I'm dead against Privacy Shield, but if it gets Cloudflare out of Europe then maybe it was worth it?

BTW, before I read this Xweet I was a Cloudflare fan.

  • richwater 20 days ago

    > BTW, before I read this Xweet I was a Cloudflare fan.

    The CEO of a US tech company asking the Vice President for help with censorship caused you to immediately flip you opinion? And not only flip your opinion, but practically embrace complete censorship of the internet if that means Cloudflare leaving Europe?

    ..yikes.

karel-3d 20 days ago

note that this is all about football streaming, which is so funny

as far as i can tell, it's really not about politics or surveillance... it's really just about football streaming, and they push the 30 minute thing because it's important for them to stop it during the match.

it's stupid; but it's even more stupid to do draconian censorship for... football streaming.

notepad0x90 20 days ago

does he not understand that countries are...countries? "quasi-judicial" is so childish of a thing to say, of all people by a CEO.

I don't even care about the details of the law, what is he aiming to achieve here by disrespecting their government as a foreigner and accusing them of "censorship". Makes wish they'd fine him just for that tweet alone. You do what a country tells you to do as a foreigner, or you leave.

These people want immigrants in their own country who obey their own laws to be treated like animals and deported to countries they've never even heard of before, yet they don't think they're obliged to follow the laws of other countries.

Isn't this guy an HN user too @eastdakota (https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=eastdakota), or am I mistaken? I'd love to hear his response to this thread, just as a fly-on-the-wall.

  • neysofu 20 days ago

    > You do what a country tells you to do as a foreigner, or you leave.

    I suppose you're right. You're still allowed to criticize the government's decisions though! This is certainly true in Italy, which has quite reasonable laws with regards to freedom of speech.

    > what is he aiming to achieve here by disrespecting their government

    Western government instituitions are hardly sacred. Again, people are allowed to criticize them, or disrespect them event if they so desire. What he's trying to achieve is a more just and reasonable application of the law, as it's quite clear if you'll care to carefully read the tweet instead of raging at his supposed disrespect for the Italian government.

    • notepad0x90 20 days ago

      The people in italy are allowed to do whatever they want with their own government. Even foreigners in other countries, who cares. But if you're a guest, you don't disrespect your host, certainly not about the rules they have.

      Imagine if I were to complain about HN rules and how the moderators are tyrants. That's what @eastdakota is doing. It's one thing to say that when you're posting else where, but not here. he's not having to following italian laws because he's an italian, he's having to do so, so that he can be afforded the privileges of doing business there.

  • Moldoteck 20 days ago

    part of democracy is being free to criticize. And their threat to leave italian market is fair too

    • notepad0x90 19 days ago

      Part of democracy is that the people of that country get to criticize their own government. It is anti-democratic for a wealthy and powerful individual of a foreign country to undermine a democratically instituted governmental organization. Italians get to have a voice in the governance of Italy and criticize their own government, that's democracy. We just had our democracy destroyed by another billionaire, quite frankly people like Musk are the biggest dangers to democracy right now, powerful individuals wielding unequal influence over democracies, where they use that influence to use democracy as a proxy for their oligarchy.

      • Moldoteck 18 days ago

        Mask is not the only threat by far. The chat control saga proves even major elected structures can pose major threats

        Even a foreign entity can criticize another local entity. That's part of democracy too. Just like warning you'll leave the country if things aren't changed

        • notepad0x90 18 days ago

          I disagree, but so long as they do it in their capacity as individuals, I don't care. Billionaires wielding their influence as public figure heads is oligarchy extending its arms across countries, because it can. The collectivism of the oligarchy.

  • tick_tock_tick 20 days ago

    I mean it's quasi-judicial because it's not a court what else would you call it?

    • notepad0x90 20 days ago

      By its name. he used that to question the legitimacy of the organization. I don't know why you would defend him or they would tolerate this.

onraglanroad 20 days ago

Wow! That's an appalling image to finish with. How could you possibly think that was good?

nektro 20 days ago

some good takes in this response but complementing jd and elon was absolutely not necessary

  • bflesch 20 days ago

    One must be thankful to him for removing the illusion that Cloudflare is some benevolent, neutral US company fighting for a more secure internet.

    My risk acceptance is not big enough to have all Cloudflare-secured websites in my country to go offline just because someone from my country has a Twitter fight with a member of the US administration or with the Cloudflare leadership.

    • blibble 20 days ago

      > One must be thankful to him for removing the illusion that Cloudflare is some benevolent, neutral US company fighting for a more secure internet.

      yeah it's great isn't it

      now all anyone has to do to discredit cloudflare is point to their CEO's pro-elon posts

      the AI slop picture at the bottom really sells it too

  • hn_go_brrrrr 20 days ago

    He's just sucking up to them to get them to act on his behalf.

  • HDThoreaun 20 days ago

    It was necessary to get them to take action. The only thing the current administration cares about is public image so publicly fellating them is what you need to do to get them to go to bat on your behalf.

    • jacquesm 20 days ago

      He runs a private company, not a government institution and I'm sure they can pay a lawyer to sue the Italian entity if it displeases him so much. Like everybody else would.

  • Pedro_Ribeiro 20 days ago

    When did Hacker News start talking like Reddit?

gusgus01 20 days ago

I should probably make sure my usage of Cloudflare is ready to be migrated off at a moments notice if it's this easy for Cloudflare to consider getting rid of it for a whole country. Funny enough, after a month in Italy and using my tailscale node at home out of habit, most online services assumed my home IP wanted the Italian version of every website (including Cloudflare). I wonder if that would have also included blocking me from access (if this ends up going through).

cubefox 21 days ago

More information:

> Italy’s communications regulator AGCOM imposed a record-breaking €14.2 million fine on Cloudflare after the company failed to implement the required piracy blocking measures. Cloudflare argued that filtering its global 1.1.1.1 DNS resolver would be "impossible" without hurting overall performance. AGCOM disagreed, noting that Cloudflare is not necessarily a neutral intermediary either. [...]

https://torrentfreak.com/italy-fines-cloudflare-e14-million-...

gibbsnich 20 days ago

If american corps do not want to play according to European rules: go ahead, just stop doing business in Europe. Europe will be fine! Understand that there are other things than the US‘s commercial interests even though it seems ATM that’s everything the US is: commercial interests. On the east, on the west: Wake up!

  • betaby 20 days ago

    > Europe will be fine!

    Unfortunately, no. Europe is not fine and won't be fine anytime soon. CloudFlare's situation is one of the cases.

    • oaiey 20 days ago

      Doing business is different in the EU as it is different in China or Russia. If you want it to be not different, work in globalization not America first.

      Europe was fine until it got disrupted by Russia and the US. But that has nothing to do with this topic here. This is just a company not following a local law. Nothing special in the law (it is shitty like any IP law) or the case here.

    • ilogik 20 days ago

      I don't fear getting shot by police. Or fear for my kid's while he's in school. Or medical debt

      We can live without cloudflare

evilmonkey19 20 days ago

I want just to step in by telling that Cloudflare also has networks in China. Probably not the best company to talk about freedom of speech when they collaborate with these goverments actively...

https://www.cloudflare.com/application-services/products/chi...

stemlord 20 days ago

How is it a bad thing to have cloudflare out of your country? No single entity should have the power to do this kind of thing even if they choose not to. Don't threaten italy with a good time

pier25 20 days ago

Given the La Liga situation in Spain with Cloudflare you can't really say he is wrong. But his MAGA comments make me ashamed to be a Cloudflare customer.

  • neysofu 20 days ago

    Which MAGA comment, specifically? Are you referring to this?

    > While there are things I would handle differently than the current U.S. administration, I appreciate @JDVance taking a leadership role in recognizing this type of regulation is a fundamental unfair trade issue [...]

    You may or may not agree, it hardly seems MAGA though.

  • jacquesm 20 days ago

    > But his MAGA comments make me ashamed to be a Cloudflare customer.

    You have the power.

  • tick_tock_tick 20 days ago

    > But his MAGA comments make me ashamed to be a Cloudflare customer.

    Asking the federal government for help dealing with other nation clearly a massive part of the federal government's role = MAGA now?

danielspace23 20 days ago

I'm Italian, and as much as I think Piracy Shield shouldn't exist, I find hard to empathize with Cloudflare, especially after this tweet.

First off, the immediate appeal to Vance and Musk is embarrassing. I believe he knows he's technically in the wrong for not abiding to the law, so gathering the sympathy of the "freedom fighters" of the web is all he can do. But the funniest part about this tweet are the "threats" he makes towards Italy.

> In addition, we are considering the following actions: > ... > discontinuing Cloudflare’s Free cyber security services for any Italy-based users

He phrases it to be as if the free tier is a favor Cloudflare does to the world, as if it's not obviously a loss-leader designed to get more people into the Cloudflare ecosystem.

> Removing all servers from Italian cities

This is my favorite by far. Does he think that this will start a popular uprising? My take is that when Italian customers notice their ping going up by 10x because all their traffic is now routed through France, they will switch to BunnyCDN, Fastly or any of the dozens of CDNs that do have servers in Italy.

In this political climate, Cloudflare siding with the current administration's general line of "we're Americans, our economy is strong so we're above international law" sends a message I don't think they fully understand. I hope this ends up as being a push for independent European cloud.

  • pannolino 20 days ago

    Another italian here; while this whole situation is bad and piracy shield is definitely not the solution, having the cloudflare CEO that threatens to remove free-tier service makes me wonder. They offer a free pill, just to be the "powerful" guys that threaten people when they are paying some million euros.

    Well done my friend. :-) I'm already moving websites off cloudflare. bye!

    P.S: I believe piracy shield is a s*t idea naturally.

  • socalgal2 20 days ago

    > He phrases it to be as if the free tier is a favor Cloudflare does to the world, as if it's not obviously a loss-leader designed to get more people into the Cloudflare ecosystem.

    It can be both. I run many open source websites behind cloudflare.

    It's the same as github. All the free hosting and free CIs and free issues/discussion forums, and free code review for open source repos (90% of all open source projects?) happens to be a a loss leader as well.

    Both are still a huge free contribution to the world. They don't have to do it. They could just have zero free anything.

    • wrxd 20 days ago

      What market share would they have without offering the free tier? Much lower than what they have now, and that would make for a more decentralised and resilient internet

      • ITB 20 days ago

        Do you remember how bad things were before CloudFlare? You’d get attacked constantly if you ran a large website.

        • pred_ 20 days ago

          I remember Tor being significantly more usable, and not having random 3 second delays on websites.

      • tick_tock_tick 20 days ago

        > and that would make for a more decentralised and resilient internet

        The only people that say that haven't run a site on the open internet in the last decade plus. It's such an ignorant takes it's hard to take anything you say seriously.

        • wrxd 20 days ago

          I’m not advocating for having no protections at all. Without Cloudflare giving away protection for free it’s entirely possible that we would have multiple smaller provider offering protection at a fair price so maybe only a smaller fraction of the internet goes offline next time Cloudflare pushes a bad configuration

          • Moldoteck 20 days ago

            fair price and europe sounds interesting... regardless it still means your competition will have it easier

    • ITB 20 days ago

      Im sorry but your epistemics are very wrong. Providing a free service with no strings attached to nearly every website in the world adds a ton of value, possibly more than Cloudflare’s market cap. And the fact that a free product can lead to profits, when other companies make the choice to pay more, does not remove that worldly contribution.

    • yomismoaqui 20 days ago

      The first one is always free...

    • pannolino 20 days ago

      I prefer to not have it at all. One thing is offering free service because you truly know the values. The other is making threats to people.

  • rpdillon 20 days ago

    Cloudflare is clearly in the right. Global censorship from an unaccountable cabal is a moral wrong. There's no sense in which Italy somehow 'wins' here, because even if they win, they lose.

    • joe463369 20 days ago

      Presumably AGCOM are accountable to the Italian government and therefore ultimately the Italian people. Or do you just mean 'unaccountable' in the sense that Americans should be able to do whatever they please, wherever they please, and they don't appreciate being hindered by trivial things like other country's laws.

    • ilogik 20 days ago

      AGCOM and cloudflare ceo can all be wrong and horrible at the same time. You don't have to pick a side

    • jimnotgym 20 days ago

      Clearly? Or clearly according to the statement in a Xweet from their CFO?

    • oytis 20 days ago

      I am very pro-piracy, but calling to Trumpist elite reads like he thinks that European instututions have no right to censor Internet, because they are European, while controlling the Internet is an exlusive American right.

      I really think Europe should adopt a Chinese approach to copyright, but I don't expect US to like it at all - they started it all after all with DMCA etc.

  • kypro 20 days ago

    > In this political climate, Cloudflare siding with the current administration's general line of "we're Americans, our economy is strong so we're above international law" sends a message I don't think they fully understand.

    This isn't international law though. It's an authoritarian move by the Italian government. "Technically" and "legally", you're correct that Cloudflare is wrong for not building infrastructure to help Italy censor the web from Italians, but sometimes you should break the law if you disagree with it strongly enough.

    Please don't take this the wrong way, but I find it interesting that no where in your comment did you try to justify the behaviour other than to say "it's the law". But that is the problem. Why is it the law? Do you think the law is justified?

    > My take is that when Italian customers notice their ping going up by 10x because all their traffic is now routed through France, they will switch to BunnyCDN, Fastly or any of the dozens of CDNs that do have servers in Italy.

    Completely agree with you there. Seems like a pretty stupid move to be honest. If I were CEO of Cloudflare I'd probably just shut my mouth and censor the internet.

    • amarcheschi 20 days ago

      The law is shitty. But we have football team owners mixing with politics, and this is the end result.

      Berlusconi owned football teams, Lotito owns Lazio and is actually in the party Forza Italia, one of the parties in the ruling coalition

  • briffle 20 days ago

    > My take is that when Italian customers notice their ping going up by 10x because all their traffic is now routed through France, they will switch to BunnyCDN, Fastly or any of the dozens of CDNs that do have servers in Italy.

    While that is true, the datacenters hosting those servers are going to lose a massive amount of monthly income by not having those servers colocated anymore.

    And just out of curiosity, how many small/medium websites would have the in house know-how to switch to a different CDN? Cloudflare fronts your site, giving you an 'automatic' CDN, where most others require changes to your site to work with.

  • codingcodingboy 20 days ago

    What happens when BunnyCDN finds itself in the same situation?

    • blibble 20 days ago

      I suspect they'll follow the law and do what the court says

      rather than pleading to their feudal masters on twitter and threatening to throw their toys out of the pram

      • HelloMcFly 20 days ago

        > I suspect they'll follow the law and do what the court says

        Which, to me, seems like a clearly worse outcome? I hate the feudal masters more than most on HN, if that somehow matters for the credibility of my own opinion.

      • Moldoteck 20 days ago

        would they follow the chat control laws too to spy on all citizens?

  • agoodusername63 20 days ago

    Well considering the fine is larger than their profits in Italy, why on earth would they keep doing business there?

    Yeah lemme just keep burning money to provide a service in a single country.

    Is there some idea that CF is a public utility?

    Or an idea that CF should just comply with a 30 minutes zero questions asked API infamous for egregious false positives?

    That CEO should stop posting but that just sounds like a business decision

  • inopinatus 20 days ago

    The free offerings are not a loss-leader in the conventional sense of anticipating future upsell. They are a traffic generator used to drive up Cloudflare’s leverage when negotiating peering with carriers & service providers, in order to drive down the marginal cost of bandwidth for Cloudflare’s actual product, the enterprise DDoS protection, with the criticality of traffic interchange expenses being evident in the vehemence with which Cloudflare discuss peering matters, such as via the astroturf’d “bandwidth alliance” grouping they sponsor.

    In which vein, anyone familiar with The Peering Playbook will recognise the kind of annoying hardball Prince thinks he is playing, but I doubt it works on nation states.

  • heraldgeezer 20 days ago

    >In this political climate, Cloudflare siding with the current administration's general line of "we're Americans, our economy is strong so we're above international law" sends a message I don't think they fully understand

    International law??

    Italian law you mean.

    Why should 1.1.1.1 block a site because some Italian wanted it blocked? Sod off.

    Also I am Swedish, so EU here too. Sick of this whiny victim attitude.

    • throwaway89201 20 days ago

      > International law??

      Note the "general line". You know, bombing boats in international waters, abducting awful dictators and "running" the country sidelining the opposition, threatening to take over an autonomous territory of Denmark, meddling with German and British politics and generally behaving very much like fascists and a wannabe dictator.

  • reaperducer 20 days ago

    First off, the immediate appeal to Vance and Musk is embarrassing.

    It's a very unhinged, very Trumpy response. The repeated use of "cabal" and hyperbole is, as you say, embarrassing.

    It's useful to know this is the official voice, tone, and attitude of CloudFlare. Now I know not to recommend it to my company. The owners would not be happy to do business with an organization that has its politics and alignment so close to the surface.

  • ancorevard 20 days ago

    "he's technically in the wrong for not abiding to the law"

    Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.

  • swlkr 20 days ago

    My conspiracy theory is that the EU is actively trying to create their own cloud through regulation after seeing the economic success from china's internet companies after the great firewall.

    • petcat 20 days ago

      > EU is actively trying to create their own cloud

      Unfortunately, the EU is not nearly coordinated for such a thing. And even if they were, regulation is not what will make it happen. EU is in a crisis of financial (VISA, AmEx) and software services (AWS, MS, Google) being almost entirely provided by USA. They are not going to dig themselves out of the hole by regulation.

      For contrast, USA is (largely) dependent on China, Korea, and Taiwan for chips. But they decided to attack the problem by investing several hundred billion dollars to develop their domestic microchip manufacturing infrastructure [1]. This appears to be paying dividends already as TSMC is already producing chips in Arizona, and estimated 30% of all production of 2nm and better to be produced in USA by 2030.

      It seems to me that this is the way nations take control of their problems. Unfortunately EU seems incapable.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHIPS_and_Science_Act

      • VWWHFSfQ 20 days ago

        > estimated 30% of all production of 2nm and better to be produced in USA by 2030

        There will come a time when the EU is also buying their chips from USA and then they'll wonder how that happened.

        • jimnotgym 20 days ago

          There will be a time when the whole world buys its Fabs from the EU. Good luck getting more after US steals Greenland...

      • jimnotgym 20 days ago

        > It seems to me that this is the way nations take control of their problems. Unfortunately EU seems incapable.

        Incapable of being a nation I guess

    • jayofdoom 20 days ago

      This is called "digital sovereignty", and it has been a major topic for OpenInfra foundation and other open source cloud foundations. Open source, and open cloud software, is the way to ensure your data can stay inside your own borders and be governed by your local laws. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lvz2PcHq0yY is one example of folks talking about this, but realistically you can find talks from OpenStack/OpenInfra going back 4/5 years on this topic.

    • pelorat 20 days ago

      We have plenty of cloud providers, most are on national levels, not international levels.

    • rockinghigh 20 days ago

      That's definitely happening. The US does this through massive government spending on American solutions. The EU is only starting to go that route as well.

  • subsistence234 20 days ago

    Really?

    A group of people who were elected by nobody, should, without any accountability or due process, be able to ban any website they don't like from the internet? And not just for Italians but globally?

    Even if you think this is a great thing for Italians (I have no idea why anyone would think that), you expect the whole world to surrender to this absurd demand? Categorical imperative???

    • danielspace23 20 days ago

      Piracy Shield only works within Italy. No provider has ever been expected to take down sites globally in response to a Piracy Shield trigger, or has ever done so.

      Also read the start of the comment. See this?

      > as much as I think Piracy Shield shouldn't exist

  • yawboakye 20 days ago

    > i’m italian

    unfortunately this preamble doesn’t add the weight you assume it should. what has being italian got to do with having an opinion on this? this and all the other “italian here” takes below. fwiw unless eastdakota is being intentionally malicious, he, with the cloudflare legal team, understands the situation and its implications for cloudflare better than any random italian.

    • mr_00ff00 20 days ago

      Cloudflare is talking about Italian law and Italian policy and making comments about his actions they will take in Italy with Italian users specifically.

      “Italian here” as in “I am not a random person with no skin in the game / I live in the country and presumably am more well informed on the policy he is talking about.

      If there was a post about a law in nyc, I think it would be helpful to hear takes from New Yorkers.

  • j-krieger 20 days ago

    > I believe he knows he's technically in the wrong for not abiding to the law,

    Free speech loses when people answer to critics of a speech limiting law that they should just follow it.

  • jimnotgym 20 days ago

    I also didn't enjoy the bit where, after saying the EU was against what Italy is doing, then blames the whole continent of Europe for this policy...and then inflicting it on the UK, which despite brexit, is still in Europe

ed_blackburn 20 days ago

That's an epic polemic. If the cost of operating in Italy isn't profitable, exit Italy. If it is, then adhere to the laws of Italy. If Italy makes the cost of business too high they'll dial it back.

fckcldflr22 20 days ago

Italian authorities woke up pissed and decided to block some sites.

Matthew Prince can decide to censor the sites he doesn't like, but god forbid some actual legal authority does the same thing.

flumpcakes 20 days ago

I'm not sure I have ever seen such an unprofessional communication from the CEO of Cloudflare, irrespective of a poorly written Italian law.

The fine was also peanuts for a company the size of Cloudflare.

Given the current political climate I think the tone he is using will turn a lot of Europeans off: Open threats against citizens of an EU country (turning off free cyber protections) and general 'American Exceptionalism' attitude and brown nosing of the current administration.

He is within his rights to pull out of a market, but this is an example of the now-becoming-classic Trumpism of smugly shouting pretty extreme open threats to bully your way into getting what you want (and screw everyone else who isn't America).

It honestly makes me want to add it to the list of American tech companies willing to sabotage Europe for disproportionate reasons. (Currently X, Microsoft) and start planning strategies to decouple from them, if not outright replace.

Perhaps this is a knee-jerk reaction, but I was not expecting this from Cloudflare.

  • Moldoteck 20 days ago

    the fine being 2x revenue from italy is not peanuts. The threat to leave the country is more than fair. If we are talking about sabotaging europe we should focus in the first place on chat control laws and how those slowly slip into adoption...

  • OGEnthusiast 20 days ago

    > Perhaps this is a knee-jerk reaction, but I was not expecting this from Cloudflare.

    You’re surprised that an American CEO is speaking out against a large fine many believe is bogus, instead of not saying anything to avoid offending…Europe? I don’t think anyone in the world right now is intimidated by the EU, from China to the US to Russia.

heraldgeezer 20 days ago

Good, make it hurt. Saying this as a European.

Why I actually use American DNS etc, it is at least open by default often. EU loves to censor and hide.

based2 20 days ago

CF: 'Cloudflare is not the hosting provider of the reported content. Cloudflare offers network service solutions including pass-through security services, a content distribution network (CDN) and registrar services. Due to the pass-through nature of our services, our IP addresses appear in WHOIS and DNS records for websites using Cloudflare.'

BenGosub 20 days ago

I have a feeling that usually when someone complains about freedom of speech, they are actually complaining about something else.

ta9000 20 days ago

AI generated image he attached to his post is cringe.

ildon 20 days ago

It's a shame that Italy is going down this path. As an Italian, I'm very disappointed and worried that these kind of fines are issued.

The worst part: because this has been issued by Agcom, it is also likely that this is not caused by the current government. Agcom is a bunch of bureaucrats that do not report to anyone other than themselves.

Eastdakota is right in saying that the rule of law is being disregarded. As a lawyer, and as someone that has been studying Italian institutions for decades, the problem is real and is only getting worse.

croes 20 days ago

>Using global revenue is further example of the extra-judicial overreach

Thank companies that transferred their national revenue via shady tax evation tricks into other countries so that their national revenue was nearly zero.

StrLght 20 days ago

Related: EU commission has also criticized AGCOM for Privacy Shield [0].

> The Commission would also like to emphasize that the effective tackling of illegal content must also take into due account the fundamental right to freedom of expression and information under the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU

[0]: https://torrentfreak.com/piracy-shield-concerns-prompt-eu-co...

tibbydudeza 20 days ago

I am all for an open internet- I want to torrent US copyrighted content :)

nalekberov 20 days ago

Since when Cloudflare started to fight for Open Internet? Thanks to them last year we weren’t able to visit many websites. If that’s how they perceive openness, they have to think twice.

moktonar 20 days ago

It’s easier for a state to enforce censorship when there is only a SPoF

mcintyre1994 20 days ago

Oh, wow. I had no idea the CEO of cloudflare was so unprofessional.

anal_reactor 20 days ago

I'm sure there are popular Italian websites behind CloudFlare. Say, train tickets. Probably not, but just for the sake of the argument.

1. Order comes to block address 69.69.69.69 within 30 minutes

2. Quickly switch Trenitalia to 69.69.69.69. Which is fine, because CloudFlare probably doesn't promise you any specific IP address, so they can assign them from the pool as they please.

3. Block 69.69.69.69.

4. In the whole country everyone who tries to buy a train ticket or check the schedule sees "train service doesn't work because football, please try again after the match", effectively paralyzing public transport.

5. Average Giuseppe learns about the ridiculousness of the situation and gets upset.

6. The government suddenly has to explain to the people what happened. They cannot pin the blame on CloudFlare (as per current fine), so the only remaining scapegoat is the football association.

7. The entire bus stands up clapping.

oriettaxx 20 days ago

If you are curious on how it looks a website taken down by Italian state apparatus, have a look at

https://phica.eu

(in details: the action was carried out by the Central Directorate for Scientific Police and Cybersecurity within the Department of Public Security, Ministry of the Interior).

The domain resolves (by many DNS, 1.1.1.1 included) to Cloudflare IPs :)

mrkramer 20 days ago

Cloudflare is not for the open internet; they can you kick you out of their service if they don't like you whenever they want, which is fine and legal for that matter or they freaking can have an outage and have your service shut down that way. It's a lose, lose situation. Stay out of Cloudflare, there is nothing good about them.

cartofupai 19 days ago

What has Cloudflare done to fight piracy enabled by their services and help solve the root cause of the issue? Anybody know?

This seems like an issue that could have been solved when it was smaller.

Lawyers and politicians are not who you want to find solutions to this kind of issues.

Did Cloudflare provide solutions that were refused by the other party?

datsci_est_2015 20 days ago

Cringey and childish appeals to US government and billionaires aside, it’s funny how this is framed as “Magnanimous Free Speech Technology Company” vs “Evil European Bureaucratic Shadow Cabal” when the latter is more like “Massive Sports Monopoly Regulatory Capture”.

When corporate entities do something bad, like attempting to maximize profits by capturing regulatory entities and bending them to their will, it’s the government’s fault. It’s laundering agency: the corporation has no agency because it simply seeks to maximize profits, but the bureaucrats have agency and are therefore morally wrong (Cloudflare CEO appealing to morals in his tweet).

Very few comments in this thread decrying the root of the issue, which is that the football media empire has grown large enough that they’re imposing negative outcomes on the pubic hand that feeds them.

Ritewut 20 days ago

Definitely an everyone sucks here situation.

fc417fc802 20 days ago

> It's impossible for either a government or parliamentary body to tell to an indipendent authority what to do and what not to do

What did Borghi mean by this? Isn't that the equivalent of a US senator publicly stating that the FCC is outside of the US federal government's ability to reign in?

throwaway89201 20 days ago

The Italian 'piracy shield' is indeed reprehensible, but the tweet is very far out there as well. For all I care Cloudflare blocks the entirety of Europe for a week or so in protest, but aligning yourself with the bunch of fascists now in charge of the US government and prefacing that with "while there are things I would handle differently than the current U.S. administration" is pretty insane as Cloudflare will be at the complete mercy of their lawlessness, if not now, then in the future.

nurettin 20 days ago

Their dns service is used for circumventing illegal sports streams. And when a government institution wants to prevent that (ideally, before the end of that match) it is an evil cabal and cf is the protector of free internet and tags #elonmusk

This must be a joke.

  • Moldoteck 20 days ago

    banning them outside of italy is evil. Fining 200% of revenue from italy is evil too

    • nurettin 20 days ago

      Banning them or not banning them has nothing to do with evil, it has to do with due process. CF complies with lawful protection against piracy or gets tfo. For me, throwing a tantrum on twitter, riling people up and telling daddy elon doesn't change any of these definitions.

      • Moldoteck 18 days ago

        It has. You are trying to enforce a policy that affects global customers instead of a localized one

paganel 20 days ago

> To effectively tackle live sports piracy,

Of course it's about football/calcio. I love Italy and almost everything related to Italy (I'm a Juventus fan to boot), but in this the Italian officials are way out of their element and behind the times.

superkuh 20 days ago

>Italy insists a shadowy, European media cabal should be able to dictate what is and is not allowed online. That, of course, is DISGUSTING

What's equally disgusting is that one corporation has managed to put itself in the position to dictate these things instead. Cloudflare has literally been running a denial of service on congress.gov (any many other important domains) for at least 3 years if you aren't running latest chrome or latest firefox or similar.

Like a broken clock, he's not wrong. But it's the pot calling the kettle black.

seydor 20 days ago

American services leaving the European market would be a blessing for european IT, but alas the europeans are not kicking then out, instead milking for fines.

I WISH cloudflare did all the things they threaten to do, but they won't

lovich 20 days ago

Threatens retaliation against the individuals in Italy directly on top of the government, and I notice he specified "based in Italy" not "Italian citizen".

Then goes on to thank JD Vance, and crow about Elon "I censor anyone who offends my ego" Musk as being right on Free Speech being in danger.

Also the "Play stupid games, win stupid prizes." which sounds synonymous with FAFO which this admin is using to mean "if you resist us, we will hurt you"

If he had just said that Cloudflare is unwilling to comply with these terms and is leaving the Italian market as such, that would be one thing, but this reads like he just ordered his MAGA hat and is going to suck up to the current admin to get them to pressure another country.

Lets add the hypocrisy here too, since he says that countries shouldn't regulate outside their borders, and is then running to Uncle Same for support

> "I will be in DC first thing next week to discuss this with U.S. administration officials...

> We believe Italy, like all countries, has a right to regulate the content on networks inside its borders. But they must do so following the Rule of Law and principles of Due Process. And Italy certainly has no right to regulate what is and is not allowed on the Internet in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, China, Brazil, India or anywhere outside its borders.

aaronrobinson 19 days ago

You may have a point but you lost me citing Vance and Musk.

npodbielski 21 days ago

"EU shadow cabal" funny considering that he then mentions running for help to US politicians.

  • carlosjobim 20 days ago

    Vance is hardly operating in the shadows. He is a very public figure.

    • jimnotgym 20 days ago

      I presume that law was passed by public vote of Italian elected politicians? Not a shadow either

      • UqWBcuFx6NV4r 20 days ago

        Yep. It sounds like “shadowy cabal” is just an emotive term for “deputised decision-makers doing something that is inconvenient for my organisation”. There’s nothing shadowy about it. It’s just not American.

    • ejpir 20 days ago

      we only see 20% of what happens in the shadow, but yah, I guess its better than 100%

  • tick_tock_tick 20 days ago

    You can accuse the US politicians of a lot but hiding in the shadows is probably the last thing you can say about the current USA administration.

  • Moldoteck 20 days ago

    it's even funnier considering EU's shadowy chat control adoption

  • renewiltord 20 days ago

    If there were an EU shadow cabal who exactly would you run to help for?

    When Bonasera’s daughter is assaulted and the perpetrators released, he goes to Don Corleone. That makes sense. It’s not funny or ironic that he turns to criminals to help with criminals.

    You need power to counter power.

    • 9dev 20 days ago

      What an absurd twisting of reality this is. There is no EU shadow cabal, as opposed to the very real not-so-shadowy cabal currently running the USA. Where the EU is concerned with a rule-based order, justice, and fair conditions, the US administration engages in open corruption, cronyism, and outright rule by force.

      The CEO of an American company complaining about the unfair treatment in Europe is more than ridiculous.

  • 0xy 20 days ago

    Probably because the admin has been vocal and proactive about extraterritorial overreach by European countries hellbent on global censorship programs.

    The UK has thrown thousands of people in jail for speech on social media, as has Germany. Both of those countries also attempt to censor speech OUTSIDE of their own countries too.

    https://www.state.gov/releases/office-of-the-spokesperson/20...

    • klaff 20 days ago

      >The UK has thrown thousands of people in jail for speech on social media, as has Germany.

      Source?

      • 0xy 20 days ago

        Certainly. The UK routinely and repeatedly jails people for protected speech, including speech protected by international standards. [1] [2] [3]

        [1] https://freedomhouse.org/country/united-kingdom/freedom-net/...

        [2] "Internet freedom declined in the United Kingdom during the coverage period due to a reported increase in criminal charges for online speech"

        [3] "A separate report from The Telegraph found that 292 people had been charged for spreading false information and “threatening communications” under the Online Safety Act between when it came into effect in 2023 and February 2025. Some civil liberties groups expressed concern that the laws were being applied broadly and in some cases punished speech protected by international human rights standards (C3)."

    • jimnotgym 20 days ago

      > proactive extraterritorial overreach

      They are certainly very active in the subject, although judging by the last week, they are not really against it in every case

      >The UK has thrown thousands of people in jail for speech on social media

      That is just not true, is it. No matter how many times you say it

      • 0xy 20 days ago

        https://freedomhouse.org/country/united-kingdom/freedom-net/...

        "Internet freedom declined in the United Kingdom during the coverage period due to a reported increase in criminal charges for online speech"

        "A separate report from The Telegraph found that 292 people had been charged for spreading false information and “threatening communications” under the Online Safety Act between when it came into effect in 2023 and February 2025. Some civil liberties groups expressed concern that the laws were being applied broadly and in some cases punished speech protected by international human rights standards (C3)."

        • jimnotgym 20 days ago

          292 is not thousands though, is it? Making the statement a barefaced lie.

          That is before we go into the actual cases of what those people did. I'm concerned about it too, and am able to freely engage with my political representatives over it. They listen and discuss it, because we are a functioning democracy. But hyping it up and lieing about it doesn't help the discussion. Please don't do what everyone else does next and post about one specific case that on a cursory examination seems troubling, I won't be drawn into it.

    • hermanzegerman 20 days ago

      There are no "European Global Censorship Programs".

      Maybe try to get your information elsewhere than Fox News (based on the Nonsense in all your recent comments)

    • youngtaff 20 days ago

      > The UK has thrown thousands of people in jail for speech on social media

      Not true… and those that were jailed were convicted for inciting racial hatred and most of them admitted the offence

      • youngtaff 18 days ago

        Is who ever disagreed with this capable of providing the evidence that it’s inaccurate?

    • UqWBcuFx6NV4r 20 days ago

      This is flat-out factually inaccurate. Don’t bring this tripe here, please and thank you.

shermozle 19 days ago

Moral high ground somewhat undermined by the post being on the deepfake porn and CSAM distribution platform formerly known as Twitter.

techblueberry 20 days ago

“any sites a shadowy cabal of European media elites deemed against their interests”

Does anyone else find it difficult to discern truth in this era where everyone seems to want to pray in your emotions. My gut is that he’s angry for the right reasons, but it’s hard for me to trust anyone who tries to use the words “shadowy cabal” in a serious context.

TIPSIO 20 days ago

List the sites they want offline'd, @eastdakota?

  • wmf 20 days ago

    I think the pirates are using fast flux so the list of sites changes daily or hourly.

tigerBL00D 20 days ago

They should fight it. But why does he have to suck up to JD Vance and Musk I the same post? I kind of lost empathy at that point.

ExpertAdvisor01 20 days ago

I don’t understand why they are tying the fine amount to global revenue rather than Italian revenue. Any Italian here who can explain it ?

kelvinjps10 20 days ago

Is this similar to what happened in Spain?

novoreorx 20 days ago

Reminds me of what France did to Telegram, but Pavel Durov has obviously made a much better statement

thrance 21 days ago

> I appreciate @JDVance taking a leadership role in recognizing this type of regulation is a fundamental unfair trade issue that also threatens democratic values. And in this case @ElonMusk is right: #FreeSpeech is critical and under attack from an out-of-touch cabal of very disturbed European policy makers.

Pretending to take a principled stand against censorship but then randomly throwing flowers to two of the biggest threats to freedom of expression is deeply hypocritical, and makes it really hard to take his reaction seriously. And let's not forget that really vile AI image that is sure to alienate all Italians against Cloudflare.

  • testdelacc1 21 days ago

    He knows the only way he wins this is if the current US Administration goes to bat for him.

    • ben_w 20 days ago

      At this point, I'm wondering to what extent all this batting is driving the EU calls for digital sovereignty, and to what extent those calls will be turned into actions.

      • wmf 20 days ago

        EU can't build so if they firewall themselves from the US they'll just have a pretty empty Internet.

        • ben_w 20 days ago

          The other night I was thinking about graphene. Not the OS, the material.

            ‘We considered patenting; we prepared a patent and it was nearly filed. Then I had an interaction with a big, multinational electronics company. I approached a guy at a conference and said, “We’ve got this patent coming up, would you be interested in sponsoring it over the years?” It’s quite expensive to keep a patent alive for 20 years. The guy told me, “We are looking at graphene, and it might have a future in the long term. If after ten years we find it’s really as good as it promises, we will put a hundred patent lawyers on it to write a hundred patents a day, and you will spend the rest of your life, and the gross domestic product of your little island, suing us.” That’s a direct quote.'
          
          - https://innovationedge.com/2010/10/13/graphene-patent-geim/

          So, we absolutely can get stuff done, the Americans just keep buying us up (DeepMind) or stealing it or using initimidation (Graphene) or espionage (of Airbus for benefit of Boeing way back).

          • solenoid0937 18 days ago

            > So, we absolutely can get stuff done, [but ...]

            But you have to keep in mind that this is the same as not being able to get stuff done :) Economies don't exist in a vacuum.

            If a US company can buy an EU company out,

            * business conditions in the EU are not favorable enough for people to want to grow their business in the EU (they would rather sell to the US);

            * there are no EU companies that are competitive enough to counteroffer (meaning the EU has not created an environment to grow competitive businesses).

            "Getting stuff done" isn't determined in a vacuum, so unless the EU totally isolates its economy it has to deal with the fact that it needs to actually encourage innovation and business to be competitive and "get stuff done" on the world stage.

            • ben_w 18 days ago

              > so unless the EU totally isolates its economy

              The US is isolating itself, that really only leaves China for Europe to worry about on these points.

              China is absolutely capable of replacing the US as buyer of all the interesting companies, European nations can absolutely fail this if they forget that.

        • jimnotgym 20 days ago

          We actually have websites in Europe, including the very first one.

          We had more before Reddit and Metabook centralised so many.

          I think we will be fine thanks

      • tjwebbnorfolk 20 days ago

        EU is extremely good at "calling for" things to happen. I haven't seen a single one of those things actually happen.

    • epolanski 20 days ago

      He can't win this, at best he can quit Italy and not offer any services there.

    • thrance 20 days ago

      Indeed, but that doesn't mean I have to be fine with that. He already had a perfectly good case against that fine, but using the occasion to cozy up to actual fascists completely discredits him to anyone serious.

sidcoolOP 20 days ago

If the CEO of the company of a foreign nation threatens a country, they country needs to inspect.

lazzlazzlazz 20 days ago

Europe's censorious behavior has become completely absurd, and reading the Italian docs (as several people here have already shared) doesn't make me more sympathetic. It's a real shame, and I'm disappointed that the dream of an internet free from censorship and manipulation seems to be forgotten by so many here - in favor of political squabbling.

linkregister 20 days ago

It is banal to observe that an agency of a government can act orthogonally to another, and also the citizens of the country.

I have noticed a trend post-2020 of a higher level of emotionality and impulsive thinking among government and business leaders in the United States. Hopefully thermostatic opinion engages and this trend reverses.

SergeAx 20 days ago

This is a continuation of LaLiga vs Cloudflare in Spain. Spaniards are just blocking the whole CF IP ranges during the broadcast of important sports games, shutting down half the internet altogether. Italians are trying another way.

I can't ad hoc the best solution for all, but asking for help from Elon Musk and JD Vance, two prominent borderline fascist figures of our time, is disturbing.

UqWBcuFx6NV4r 20 days ago

As a non-American (and non-European) I got the foul stench of ‘American upset that other legal jurisdictions exist’ before I even finished the first sentence. The absolute slathering on of such emotive language feels very disingenuous. It’s immediately obvious that I’m being taken for some sort of ride. I can picture Kyle’s dad from South Park, at his computer, with his glass of red, writing his Yelp reviews. I genuinely don’t know how anyone can write like this and think that it’s a good look.

arter45 20 days ago

As an Italian with little interest in watching soccer (pirated or not), I have just read AGCOM's decision and it provides a bit more context (although with typical legalese language):

- right holders used the piracy shield platform to report Cloudflare-owned IP/FQDNs used for piracy streaming

- Italian anti-piracy law mandates that "IT service providers" (rough translation) have to comply with AGCOM orders by enforcing blocks at the DNS or IP level or with other technical or organizational measures

- in 2024, AGCOM told Cloudflare to appoint someone in charge of these matters, highlighted that a lot of piracy websites use Cloudlfare, and invited Cloudflare to join itself the piracy shield platform

- again in 2024, following additional notes explicitly sent to Cloudflare (apparently via snail mail, but I guess it's for legal reasons) and published on AGCOM website, AGCOM also invited Cloudflare to join the "Technical Board" of Piracy Shield, basically the forum where ISPs discuss technical aspects of how Piracy Shield is actually implemented

- in 2025, AGCOM told CF to block certain IPs. CF didn't reply and AGCOM checked that those IPs were not blocked (surprise? I guess?), so AGCOM formally told CF they were violating the law. AGCOM also asked CF and Guardia di Finanza (Italian police specialized in fiscal/financial matters) to report CF's European and Italian sales figures. CF gave these data (which are redacted in the public AGCOM document).

- CF replied with a long list of observations, essentially saying that 1) CF hasn't joined piracy shield so they don't know which IPs should be blocked, 2) there is a pending hearing at the TAR (the court responsible for complaints against government/public entities/regulators decisions), 3) CF has no technical way to "know, control, modify or interfere in any way" with the content published by its customers, 4) even if blocked by CF the website is still online, 5) setting up a DNS filter will be very complicated and will impact performance (latency)

- AGCOM argued that 1) yes, CF hasn't joined piracy shield but it also didn't accept the invitation to join its technical board and, anyway, when it asked CF to block certain IPs it actually listed them, 2) AGCOM is not accusing CF of violating copyright laws, but of not complying with these piracy shield measures and, because CF actually didn't block those IPs, there is no need to wait for the other court hearing. In addition, other court hearings have considered CF responsible when illegal websites are hosted using its services, because of the reverse proxy service (basically, the CDN itself) and the fact that CF services can optimize performance and allow users to reach a website even when it's blocked (I think they're talking about their 1.1.1.1 DNS), 3) over 11 years, CF received a lot of notes from AGCOM because of domains hosted/protected by CF, but never challenged them, and in many cases CF was acting as reverse proxy for these domains (surprise?) 4) blocking these resources is mandated by law, and that resources not hosting illegal content anymore have been "unblocked" in the past, 5) CF has the technical knowledge to set up this kind of filters and should be organized to be able to comply with various laws and regulations.

I think this gives a bit more nuance. By the way, personally, I would argue that it's not true that CF has no technical way to "know, control, modify or interfere in any way" with the content, precisely because it acts as a giant reverse proxy/MITM. Arguing about the validity of this law (although the law was written by the parliament) or its implementation is one thing, but claiming that a CDN has no technical way to block resources seems a bit naive.

licebmi__at__ 20 days ago

I totally disagree with Italy's law, but quoting Vance and Musk on this plus the AI slop at the end. Nah, I'm taking my stuff out of Cloudflare.

pembrook 20 days ago

Reading this comment thread it’s now clear to me that HN is beyond any repair and is officially dead.

It’s fully transitioned to a political reactionary Reddit board devoid of any interesting discussion or insight.

Did it get too popular for its own good or has everyone just gone crazy?

bambax 20 days ago

I kind of like(d) Cloudflare, but appealing to Musk and the couch lover that's currently serving as VP is despicable. What a swamp the US have become.

rsimmons 20 days ago

Sounds similar to the UK Online Safety Act and their internet Czar.

forty 20 days ago

His whole #freespeech theater would be slightly more convincing if they did not praise America's neo fascists in the same tweet and also if cloudflare did not work in, for example, China (where I guess they comply with local censorship).

It's fine to defend your profits but don't pretend you defend anything else.

CodinM 20 days ago

I read through that and I'm not a fan of Cloudflare. I live in the EU, I dislike the increased control that the EU keeps desiring - but generally we've fought it with various degrees of success. I feel it's a bit disingenuous to act like the US has total internet freedom since you're the folks that invented ISP letters. Regardless of that, what really bugged me was the threat of removing the free-tier service for any Italy based accounts, which despite being fully in their right to do, is a shitty thing to threaten with - and it's shocking he would threaten that so easily.

So yes, my reaction is now to move all of my shit from Cloudflare as soon as possible because I don't see CF as a reliable partner right now after that tantrum.

bluecalm 20 days ago

As a side note: just today Polish president veto'ed a law that would allow similar government power. The government coalition instantly turned on "think of the children" rhetoric in response. I think they are misreading the public sentiment on this one though.

df0b9f169d54 20 days ago

okay, Cloudflare CEO is gonna complain his business and legal issues with the one who is defending a murder . Great!.

jurschreuder 20 days ago

So now in Europe we can now also download all Hollywood movies for free? Because of the open internet?

lijok 20 days ago

Oh how far eastdakota has fallen. What is it with billionaires losing their damn mind the wealthier they become?

polack 20 days ago

Surly this post must have the opposite effect of what he intended. Even if you side with Cloudflare on the core issue this post is so cringy my butthole collapsed into itself.

Are Americans not embarrassed by the way these tech bros operate? As a European it’s obvious that the US gone from an allied to an enemy. I would feel like a traitor if I picked US tech these days.

alpb 21 days ago

    censor from the Internet any sites a shadowy cabal
    of European media elites deemed against their interests
Has he recently gone full conspiracy theorist? (Also what's that cringy chatgpt picture supposed to tell us?) Who is the shadowy cabal of EU elites? If anything EU is purely politicians obedient to USA interests. I'm guessing this is what happens in tech when the tide starts to shift, because tech doesn't have morals, it's all just about money. Start praising the new administration no matter what they do, until they're not popular and start praising the next thing. Looking forward to his back-to-woke pivot in 2 years.
  • kingstnap 21 days ago

    It might not be a conspiracy theory. Europeans have serious media skeletons in there closet.

    Consider La Liga in Spain. When football matches are on they have a blank check to block whatever they want wherever they want. Genuinely they take down all of cloudflare and all kinds of shit. I think they were even DNS banning everyone on .tv TLD. Its wild how much legal power they have.

    This was brought up on hacker news often.

    They also have their apps spy on users microphones and gps to detect where someone might be watching their streams to make sure you aren't doing it in bars. [1]

    Italian media is trying to do similar stuff with their piracy shield stuff. [2]

    AtomicDig219303 on Reddit when Italy blocked all of google drive.

    > Wait, I don't think that your post describes how fucking idiotic this whole thing is. Piracy shield is a system implemented by AGCOM (which as OP said is a governing agency) and basically "gifted" to the fucking mafia that is Serie A (yes, the football/soccer league) to block access to pirated streams of football matches.

    [0] https://reclaimthenet.org/laligas-anti-piracy-crackdown-trig...

    [1] https://english.elpais.com/elpais/2019/06/12/inenglish/15603...

    [2] https://www.reddit.com/r/europe/comments/1mgq41i/italys_pira...

  • iamnothere 20 days ago

    He is partially right. The Atlanticist faction in both the US and Europe has been working to get the internet under control since 2016. This project started as a backlash to the Trump election and moved into high gear with COVID and Ukraine. This faction has a sincere belief that the prior openness of the internet is a threat to the international order, as it prevents authorities from shaping civilian perceptions and behavior.

    The battlefield has become more complex since 2016, as the old international order is pretty much dead now, so you have competing factions of Atlanticists (US rump admin/UK/FR/DE/Brussels) versus nationalists (US/Israel/Eastern Europe) who both want control of the internet, but through different means and for different reasons. You could also tack on BRICS nations who decided that the best path is to wall themselves off from the open internet.

    • iamnothere 20 days ago

      Go ahead and downvote, you know I’m right which is why you won’t offer even a single comment in response.

      Each of these factions trying to kill the open internet is doing it for selfish reasons and all are in the wrong for doing so. You’re strangling an international commons for your geopolitical games. Shame on all of you!

  • Almondsetat 21 days ago

    He contradicts himself in the span of a single sentence. How is it possible that this was done solely by Italy (with concerns from the rest of the EU) and yet this is the work of a cabal of European media elites? If this were true, why isn't the entire EU involved?

    • wmf 20 days ago

      Italy and Spain are doing the same thing and there may be other EU countries being controlled by football leagues that I haven't heard of.

      • jimnotgym 20 days ago

        > there may be

        Indeed, but there may not be. so maybe don't base any strong opinions on that kind of logic.

    • ben_w 21 days ago

      That's not really a self-contradiction; if we pretend the USA's copyright lobby had made California pass a similar law… well, that might not work, I have no idea if that would be unconstitutional inter-state trade restriction or something in the USA, but for the sake of showing why it's not a self-contradiction can we pretend?

      If the US media elites had convinced California to do that, they'd be a "shadowy cabal of [US] media elites", even if there was opposition from the rest of the USA.

      Again, don't read too much into if this would actually work in the USA, the EU is not the USA, this isn't that kind of comment.

      • bflesch 20 days ago

        It's not that long ago that US media conglomerates used MPAA to threaten Sweden to remove piratebay?

        • ben_w 20 days ago

          Sure, but Sweden isn't in the US so I don't see that illustrating anything in this analogy.

      • jimnotgym 20 days ago

        US media elites got DMCA and YouTubes copyright strike introduced, I suppose they were powerful enough to sidestep the states and go after Congress instead.

mouthwooed 18 days ago

regardless, every time I hear this dweeb open his mouth I find I think less of him.

jacquesm 20 days ago

That's a pretty bad take. This whole situation came into existence because CF has positioned itself as a convenient choke point. The Italian government is dumb, but 'eastdakota' is being dumber here. JD Vance and Musk are about as poisonous to international relations as it gets and bringing them up in relation with Europe making and enforcing its own laws - no matter how misguided - makes me think you should probably focus on the beam in your own eye first.

As for the rest of the threats: please do. Europe needs less, not more dependencies on USD and US companies. We'll figure it out, or not.

  • everfrustrated 20 days ago

    There are many European CDN providers. Cloudflare is nowhere near as critical to the internet as HN crowd would suggest.

    • DenisM 20 days ago

      If a company choses Cloudflare they would have great service everywhere except Italy. If they chose a service with lower quality / reach, they will suffer degraded service across the board. If they try to use more than one CDN that’s a lot of hassle.

      It’s not clear which way the decisions will go in reality. Past experience suggests that tech companies eventually accommodate local laws, trading complexity of explaining this to customers for complexity of implementing targeted blocking tools.

      • jacquesm 20 days ago

        A lot depends on the next couple of months and the US's continued belligerence against - former? - allies. If that isn't toned down, and drastically so then I expect there to be many more consequences than just for CDN providers.

    • jacquesm 20 days ago

      They're at 82% or so of all websites using CDNs, other providers are extremely small in comparison. CF is this large because of a feedback loop with respect to being able to deal with large denial of service attacks. They are - for most serious players - the only game in town now.

vander_elst 20 days ago

Why cannot cloudlflare just apply a filter to the incoming requests and if the IP is belongs to am Italian AS they just drop it?

mikelitoris 20 days ago

Just by looking at the profile picture my douchebag detecting spidey-senses were tingling. And reading further down the text with people he brings up as he cries for mommy... ding ding ding!

drcongo 20 days ago

I was nodding along in agreement until he inserted his tongue into Musk and Vance. A little bit of sick came up.

jiveturkey 20 days ago

> quasi-judicial

the tweet starts off pretty strong, which I didn't care for but I understand. this phrase however feels wrong. i guess i don't understand Italy, but isn't this like saying the SEC or FCC is quasi-judicial?

> In other words, Italy insists a shadowy, European media cabal should be able to dictate what is and is not allowed online.

ah, unlike when CF themselves decides unilaterally, not even as part of a cabal, what should and should not be allowed online. got it.

iamnothere 21 days ago

In case people can’t/don’t want to read something on X, here is the statement:

Yesterday a quasi-judicial body in Italy fined @Cloudflare $17 million for failing to go along with their scheme to censor the Internet. The scheme, which even the EU has called concerning, required us within a mere 30 minutes of notification to fully censor from the Internet any sites a shadowy cabal of European media elites deemed against their interests. No judicial oversight. No due process. No appeal. No transparency. It required us to not just remove customers, but also censor our 1.1.1.1 DNS resolver meaning it risked blacking out any site on the Internet. And it required us not just to censor the content in Italy but globally. In other words, Italy insists a shadowy, European media cabal should be able to dictate what is and is not allowed online.

That, of course, is DISGUSTING and even before yesterday’s fine we had multiple legal challenges pending against the underlying scheme. We, of course, will now fight the unjust fine. Not just because it’s wrong for us but because it is wrong for democratic values.

In addition, we are considering the following actions: 1) discontinuing the millions of dollars in pro bono cyber security services we are providing the upcoming Milano-Cortina Olympics; 2) discontinuing Cloudflare’s Free cyber security services for any Italy-based users; 3) removing all servers from Italian cities; and 4) terminating all plans to build an Italian Cloudflare office or make any investments in the country.

Play stupid games, win stupid prizes. While there are things I would handle differently than the current U.S. administration, I appreciate @JDVance taking a leadership role in recognizing this type of regulation is a fundamental unfair trade issue that also threatens democratic values. And in this case @ElonMusk is right: #FreeSpeech is critical and under attack from an out-of-touch cabal of very disturbed European policy makers.

I will be in DC first thing next week to discuss this with U.S. administration officials and I’ll be meeting with the IOC in Lausanne shortly after to outline the risk to the Olympic Games if @Cloudflare withdraws our cyber security protection.

In the meantime, we remain happy to discuss this with Italian government officials who, so far, have been unwilling to engage beyond issuing fines. We believe Italy, like all countries, has a right to regulate the content on networks inside its borders. But they must do so following the Rule of Law and principles of Due Process. And Italy certainly has no right to regulate what is and is not allowed on the Internet in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, China, Brazil, India or anywhere outside its borders.

THIS IS AN IMPORTANT FIGHT AND WE WILL WIN!!!

  • easyThrowaway 20 days ago

    It's not "quasi-judicial". They have no judicial authority, at all, despite how they present themselves.

    They can only show them their supposed findings to a ministerial judge and tell them "Weeeh weeh, Cloudflare is being mean".

    Then the judge will look at the AGCOM analysis, listen to Cloudflare or an EU representative or whoever may raise an objection to those findings, and then, after a loooooong time, enforce or not the fine.

philip1209 20 days ago

"Show me the incentive, and I'll show you the outcome." - Charlie Munger

wrxd 20 days ago

I think the fine is wrong, but the attempt to weaponise JD Vance and Elon Musk doesn’t look well at all. The next time they see something they don’t like hosted/protected by Cloudflare they will only have to ask more or less nicely and there is a good chance Cloudflare will handle it for them

easyThrowaway 20 days ago

The interesting part is that neither the AGCOM nor Cloudflare quite understand how each other really work. Also they both believe they got more leeway than they truly have.

AGCOM is an institutional apparatus, they operate separately, but not independently, from whatever leftwing or rightwing government in charge for the most part (past Berlusconian interests aside) and everything they do is entirely subject to not getting out of the guidelines imposed by the EU, no matter what they want anyone else to believe.

Frankly the best course of action for Cloudflare would be getting in touch with the Board of European Regulation pointing them out that AGCOM is, probably for the hundreth time I guess, overstepping their authority. And they should stop right there, otherwise they're the ones that will be actually fined.

  • bflesch 20 days ago

    Well put. Several nuances are most likely lost in translation. Nevertheless the Cloudflare CEO took it as an opportunity to out himself as a buffoon and harming Cloudflare's international reputation.

    • easyThrowaway 20 days ago

      They clearly have way more in common than expected.

      Hell, I think AGCOM will probably rescind the fine for the sole reason they found out someone who's taking them seriously for the first time.

knowitnone3 20 days ago

Geoblock all of Italy

hansvm 20 days ago

This seems easy enough to solve. Every time the football oligarchy catches too many IPs in their dragnet, you can accidentally drag all the legitimate football exit nodes into your DNS blacklist. The only way to be sure DNS doesn't work for pirated football is to ensure it doesn't work for any football.

m00dy 20 days ago

looks like, he didn't pay enough for bribes

TurdF3rguson 20 days ago

Wow that guy does not sound like what in my head a Cloudflare CEO sounds like. Win stupid prizes? Bro...

  • coffeefirst 20 days ago

    Seriously. If only he had a professional comms team who could help him craft a message that didn't read like... that.

    • fc417fc802 20 days ago

      I got the impression that he might be trying to imitate Trump's communication style as part of his appeal to the US administration throwing its weight behind him here. Particularly given the image attachment at the end. It's difficult to imagine that nobody qualified double checked this before he posted it.

ahmetomer 20 days ago

I respect and agree with Cloudflare's right to pursue the decisions that Matthew Prince outlined — even if it is used as retaliation or a threat. What has completely turned the tone of the message for me is appealing to Elon Musk & JD Vance for democratic values and free speech.

I can't really take it seriously when free speech and democracy are pretended to be important only when the interests of the political figures of the US admin or of Elon Musk are at stake. Those values are supposed to be enjoyed by everyone and followed through on, no matter whose agenda and interests they may harm (or improve) as a result. At this point, they are tools (or weapons) that are appealed to when one's interests (or opinions, or feelings) are threatened.

If we listen to JD Vance and Elon Musk, we get the idea that it's the leftists and brown immigrants and democrats and woke people who are making everything worse, inciting violence and terror, are a block to prosperity and advancement, a threat to Western civilization. And thus, free speech is important to only further repeat and consolidate these points. The other way around cannot be entertained even as a possibility. They are exempt, for they are free of such flaws and imperfections.

It is a difficult balance to keep between universal values, such as democracy and free speech, and one's own interests, such as political and financial. I would want to see more honesty than a pretense of complete devotion to these values. No one is. I am not, for that matter.

I don't buy into Matthew Prince's appeal to free speech and democracy, but I am open to happily changing my mind in an incident where Cloudflare consequently takes an action that would harm the interests of said figures in a meaningful (not symbolic) way.

redeeman 20 days ago

of course cloudflare deplatformed some without any court involved. it would be a whole lot more honest if they had not shown their true colors

adrr 21 days ago

Elon Musk the bastion of free speech who famously banned a twitter account that posted publicly available information.

  • littlestymaar 21 days ago

    One? Elon banned thousands after he took over.

    He event went as far as personally canceling a Tesla customer's order for criticizing him. That's how petty he is. He has no interest in freedom of speech whatsoever, it's merely a talking point.

    • jimnotgym 20 days ago

      Me included, not that I'm very interesting. Every time I asked why I got a different reason from support.

      Edit: the last reason given was 'impersonation', which I thought was pretty random

    • ilc 21 days ago

      I disagree.

      Freedom of Speech guarantees the right to speak. Not the right to have no repercussions.

      Elon has GREAT interest in Freedom of Speech, it enables him to have far more power than regulating the type of "speech" he showed in cancelling that customer's order.

      • elAhmo 21 days ago

        Elon has interest in monetary gain and stirring conflicts around the world. It is sad that individuals like you are drunk on his coolaid.

      • Terretta 21 days ago

        > Freedom of Speech guarantees the right to speak. Not the right to have no repercussions.

        How is that different from, say, Freedom of Theft guaranteeing the right to steal, but not the right to have no repercussions?

        By these definitions, everyone has these “rights”?

        • muddi900 19 days ago

          I think the OP meant 'social reprecussions'.

          But really it is a citizen, Elon Musk, exercising their property rights. The fact that he claims that such restrictions should not be applied to speech he likes is the problem.

      • bakies 20 days ago

        he's controlling the speech, not freeing it

      • undeveloper 20 days ago

        try posting "cisgender" on xhitter

  • s-y 21 days ago

    Musk is a contrarian. He, however, is not a government body (nor does he represent one, u can choose to include the dubious Doge efforts into the discussion but that will devolve into semantics that do not negate the point). As a private citizen with a platform for which he overpaid - he can do as he pleases within the confines of said platform. Musk, however, cannot enforce fines on other providers and request stuff from them. This is what the post is about.

    • testdelacc1 21 days ago

      He can do whatever he wants on that platform. Equally, can elected officials decide to ban that private platform?

      • s-y 20 days ago

        Again, apples and oranges. Private citizens vs government. Musk has no power given to him by someone, the government does, using that power in a way that might be considered abusive/authoritarian might yield (deserved) backlash.

        I'm not sure if I'm not getting something. It's a for-profit organization vs a government entity. It's not even remotely similar.

  • Covzire 21 days ago

    Besides attempting to get him murdered by a crazy person seeing a chance to be famous, what possible reason does someone have to constantly broadcast the location of his transportation? What difference does knowing where it or he is make in the daily lives of anyone? What long term planning does the information give to people?

    • ben_w 20 days ago

      In the case of private plane info, to highlight hypocrisy regarding the eco-friendly identity he was at that time seemingly trying to curate.

  • IncreasePosts 21 days ago

    If someone says they believe in free speech, they have to let me spraypaint anything I want on their house. Otherwise they're a hypocrite.

    • ben_w 21 days ago

      If they publicly state that the house is a "town square" (he has said that of twitter), and they say that they are a "free speech absolutist" (he has said this of himself in the context of this house/town square/website), and state that "By 'free speech,' I simply mean that which matches the law.", then yes, if they don't let you spray-paint (tweet) whatever you want that's not strictly unlawful (like, ah, calling for civil disorder in the UK?), they are indeed a hypocrite.

      When the house is digital (twitter is), why even use spray paint as the analogy?

      • bakies 20 days ago

        Can't throw rotten tomatoes at internet nazis in the nazi "town square" unfortunately.

    • pavel_lishin 21 days ago

      When Musk bought twitter, he all-but-explicitly said "I have finally bought this house, which I will let anyone spray paint".

      • yxhuvud 20 days ago

        And then promptly started to ban terms like "cis-gendered".

      • bakies 20 days ago

        except for trans people and all the people he banned that disagree with him

    • muddi900 19 days ago

      This is a very sound example of what the right to free speech is; it is a protection for your property rights. The state can't retaliate against you for saying something, and can't compel you to accept any speech on your property.

      However, as a defense of Papa Elon, it is ironic. Must and his lickspittles claim that online platform should not be allowed to block whatever speech they want.

      Except speech they don't like. Like plane locations.

    • adrr 21 days ago

      Italy can use the same argument.

    • UqWBcuFx6NV4r 20 days ago

      Intellectually dishonest analogy but I’m sure you already know this.

scarlehoff 20 days ago

I find the "censorship" frame funny. This is happening because certain countries in Europe are governed by soccer oligarchs instead of big tech.

Choose your poison, I guess.

Phelinofist 20 days ago

I mean just banning stuff because some media companies want it is brain dead, but immediately calling for daddy Vance and mommy Musk is just pathetic.

R_Spaghetti 21 days ago

Another reason to dump an american big tech firm and switch to Bunny.net for example. Better a democratic based error than an american greed based CEO.

prettygood 20 days ago

Damn, that’s a pretty disappointing statement. Some parts are correct but then he goes completely overboard. After everything that has been happening the past year with the new administration it’s hard to keep supporting this as a European.

Will move our startup from Cloudflare.

tekkk 20 days ago

While he has a point and Italians are kinda embarrassing in their politics, can't help the feeling that he comes off as a bit of cry-baby. Trying to win points with the JD/Musk mafia that hard seems weird and icky. Seems like signaling to other billionaire bros that they belong to their faction, which in my books isn't that great either. That last uppercase line a cherry on top of shattering my image of CF as respectable tech-vendors.

ic_fly2 20 days ago

No matter the merit of the claim, the appeal to the fascists in the US government invalidates any legitimacy.

And that is an achievement given how moronic the current Italian government is.

Dotnaught 21 days ago

By "shadowy cabal of European media elites," is Prince referring to elected Italian officials? What have they asked Cloudflare to ban?

  • sva_ 21 days ago

    No. To private entities (news outlets) who, according to this law, get to decide what websites to ban without a court order or any due process

    • bflesch 20 days ago

      The exact same thing is implemented in Germany already (DNS-level block), and I did not see Cloudflare CEO rage posting on Twitter about it.

      • bigbuppo 20 days ago

        "you must block things in germany after it goes through a formal government process" versus "you must block things globally even for places not subject to italian law because an italian media company doesn't like it"

        There's more than a subtle difference betweeen the two.

      • hn_go_brrrrr 20 days ago

        Has Germany tried to fine Cloudflare over it?

      • subsistence234 20 days ago

        Because the German law only harms Germans, whereas the Italian law in question demands global bans.

      • sva_ 20 days ago

        I'm in Germany and Cloudflare DNS doesn't Block eg Annas Archive for me, while my ISP does. I also don't reckon Germany tried to fine Cloudflare yet. So what is your point?

  • IncreasePosts 21 days ago

    The driving force behind this is getting pirated streams of football matches knocked offline. Currently by the time any action is taken the match is over, which is why they want the response-within-30-minutes.

  • epolanski 20 days ago

    This is about football streaming, the cabal media elites are right holders fighting illegal streams, which 1.1.1.1 bypasses even if filters are put at the ISP level.

Smortaxen 20 days ago

This tweet is unhinged and disappointing. Another techbro billionaire. I've sold what little stock I had in Cloudflare and will be moving off their services.

andy99 21 days ago

I don’t know the backstory but Cloudflare arguing for an open internet is super ironic, presumably he means they want the be the one to close it off and are upset that someone else is ruining their monopoly on it.

  • k4rli 21 days ago

    Definitely getting that vibe. Also praising M*sk and USA leadership clearly points to only having his business interests in mind.

    Feels like engagement bait for attention seeking. No doubt they'll still keep the Olympics contracts as they are.

    • adrr 21 days ago

      1.1.1.1 DNS is just querying root DNS servers. And @elon.jet twitter account was just querying ADS data and posting it. Its exactly same, yet this guy praises Elon.

      • bflesch 20 days ago

        DNS lookups via 1.1.1.1 are also directly fed into the US surveillance state so peter thiel can use his palantir dashboard to see if you are the antichrist or not.

    • nipponese 20 days ago

      Is agreeing with an adversary on a single point the same as praising them?

      • jimnotgym 20 days ago

        Interesting choice of words to try and make the logic sound ok. Try:

        'Is praising an adversary on a single issue the same as praising them'. Yes, yes it is

  • Almondsetat 21 days ago

    Here's the backstory:

    A government agency in Italy which is known nation-wide to complain and fine other institutions for the stupidest and pettiest reasons, fined another institution for a stupid and petty reason. But of course, ignorant people just see this single occurrence and make up conspiracy theories about it. (Really, if you looked at some examples of previous fines and complaints by AGCOM you would laugh your ass off independently of your political stance)

  • cubefox 20 days ago

    So you think it's fine that if some Italian agency orders Cloudflare to block some domain on it's 1.1.1.1 public DNS (or Google on it's 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4) it should be blocked for everyone on Earth who is using this DNS server, including yourself? And if you think otherwise, you are merely "upset that someone else is ruining their monopoly on it"?

  • blibble 20 days ago

    USian tech-CEO posting petulant self-serving arguments about "FREEDOM" on twitter? what a cliche

    cloudflare have deliberately designed their network so that every IP can serve up every cloudflare website

    this means a court order can't block a single cloudflare site without blocking every cloudflare site, causing massive collateral damage

    I suspect this is a deliberate business decision: an attempt to raise the "cost" of blocking so high that courts won't attempt to do it at all

    and then they make arguments about "it's not technically possible", when it is (farm the target of the orders off to a separate pool of IPs)

    and for DNS they could apply a filter based on the source IP country of origin

    Prince: please, please, please exercise your empty threat, and withdraw your shitty company's services from Italy

    and then you'll watch as Italy then raises it at the EU level, and then you'll have to do the same there too

    • great_wubwub 20 days ago

      > this means a court order can't block a single cloudflare site without blocking every cloudflare site

      Not true. Cloudflare can't block only a single web site _by IP address_ but that's pretty common with IPv4, The same is true of Fastly and AWS and I'd be shocked if there's a mass-market CDN out there that has a unique IPv4 address per customer.

      They can absolutely block any site they want at the application layer (SNI or Host header or whatever they use, IDK, I'm a network guy).

      • blibble 20 days ago

        > I'd be shocked if there's a mass-market CDN out there that has a unique IPv4 address per customer.

        fortunately you only need to farm out the ones out that are under court orders

        > They can absolutely block any site they want at the application layer (SNI or Host header or whatever they use, IDK, I'm a network guy).

        these court orders usually work by getting end user ISPs (which are regulated) to block or reroute the IP and/or DNS entry

        neither of which can be realistically done due to conscious decisions by cloudflare

  • robinhood 20 days ago

    I honestly don't see the irony. I believe Cloudflare tries to argue for an open internet. I use some of their features on the free plan and it's of tremendous help, especially considering the price I pay (ie 0$). I'm actually super glad that Cloudflare exists.

eur0pa 20 days ago

Another C-suite having a meltdown because their self-perceived power is not ubiquitous

Hamuko 20 days ago

Is Matthew also pro-CSAM or is there some other reason to namedrop Elon Musk right now?

cdrnsf 20 days ago

He lost me when he started thanking fascists (Vance, Musk et al) who are actively attacking speech in the US they don't agree with. The hypocrisy is unbearable.

UqWBcuFx6NV4r 20 days ago

> We believe Italy, like all countries, has a right to regulate the content on networks inside its borders. But they must do so following the Rule of Law and principles of Due Process. I really couldn’t care less about your legal philosophy, mate. I understand that you’re used to corporations setting the rules, and I’m sure that it brought you such great joy to write a little post where you got to flex about being well-connected with your country’s morally corrupt administration. However, your views on whether or not a country had a right to self-regulation, have zero impact on your obligation to comply. You don’t get to parachute in and set your own terms. Do you really think that your childish threats of ‘pulling your free plan’ and ‘not opening an office’ will have the intended effect? I genuinely can’t work out why someone didn’t tap this kid on the shoulder and suggest that he tone his rant down a bit.

The US is a sick, sick country. Nowhere else does anyone have the misplaced confidence to act this insanely stupid.

joduplessis 21 days ago

Really like the forthrightness.

llm_nerd 20 days ago

I suspect the "we're an American company and we're going to get the government protection racket to threaten you" gambit isn't going to achieve the results he's hoping for.

I was reading through this and at first I saw Italy as the bad guys, demanding ridiculous asks. The moment the "Play stupid games, win stupid prizes." nonsense appeared, followed right after by callouts to Vance and Musk, and threats that he's going to stomp his little feet to the administration...good god, this is pathetic. He looks like a clown. A snivelling, whiny, entitled clown.

lol, ban Cloudflare from Europe. Honestly, at this point all American companies should be banned everywhere but the US, as every American oligarch like this guy does this "We're American gosh darnit!" bit while this administration talks about annexing allies. Disgusting, deplorable behaviour.

  • asgeesg 20 days ago

    So you saw the truth first, then your ego got bruised?

    • llm_nerd 20 days ago

      Two things can be true-

      a) sovereign nations can impose literally any rule they want on foreign businesses, even if those rules are ridiculous, arbitrary, or defy the "freedom" values of some other country.

      b) This incredibly tired "I'm telling Daddy Trump!" bit is pathetic, and it, among with the fact that America is currently -- by far -- the most dangerous country on the planet, should yield garbage people like Price getting their ass handed to them.

grayhatter 21 days ago

I do appreciate reading a PR, from a CEO, that's not unsalvageably tone deaf. At the first half, I was wondering what the point of this was, given if Italy thinks this is something they're allowed to apply across the globe. That instantly makes this a political issue they probably need to be talking to the State Department about. Then I got to the 2nd half, and was impressed that I wasn't immediately annoyed by the ass kissing.

I assume Cloudflare has a great PR team because this feels like a master class in rhetoric. Given how you're expected to solicit help these days.

Rhetoric aside, it'll be interesting to see how the whole thing plays out. Italy seems to have taken out a hammer, and their d.... well, I'm just gonna hope the Internet wins this one.

  • pavel_lishin 21 days ago

    > was impressed that I wasn't immediately annoyed by any ass kissing.

    Did it only annoy you after reading it again?

    • dandellion 21 days ago

      He should be careful, a third reading and he might start to enjoy it.

    • grayhatter 21 days ago

      No? In a disagreement with Italy, cloudflare is definitely going to need the intervention of the US administration. This (angry Twitter post) is how you're expected to ask for help in this timeline. I was expecting to annoyed with the faux allegiance. But here, I think they communicated their distain over the behavior as best as they could, while still asking for help.

      I might not like it, but I understand it.

      Equally, I might be wrong; but this feels to me like the post tries to as subtly as possible communicate that they have problems with the administration (my expectations for anyone who is at all ethical) While still also needing their help. And if I'm wildly incorrect; and cloudflare is actually in love with the administration, then it's still a master class in rhetoric, because they tricked me, which was probably the point?

  • Dansvidania 20 days ago

    no offense, but this seems to me like a tantrum. I'd say a far cry from rhetoric, let alone a masterclass.

renewiltord 21 days ago

Makes sense to me. Italy is going to fine them. Then Italy can build their own service.

languagehacker 20 days ago

For the first couple of paragraphs, I almost agreed with this dope. Thought he was a moderate on the wrong side of things after the next couple of paragraphs, and after the AI-generated anime picture, I'm pretty sure the guy is a groyper.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection