Recent reporting reveals that the United Nations (UN) will soon hold their final negotiation meeting on its new Cybercrime Treaty - The treaty is a much-needed update to the European-led Budapest Convention on Cybercrime
https://www.coe.int/en/web/cybercrime/the-budapest-convention
the original framework that has been in place since 2001 and has served as the first meaningful international treaty addressing Internet and cybercrime
crux of their argument is clear: the current language is insufficient and does not successfully balance the need for increased security with individual data privacy.
More here: #Cybercrime
The push for this treaty began in October 2017 when Russia drafted and submitted a proposal for international cooperation in combating cybercrime
¯\(°_o)/¯
I mean, talk about ironic
From the outset, the committee faced widespread disagreement over the treaty's wording, with countries like China pushing to include provisions against "spreading false information" as a cybercrime - ongoing disagreements led to compromises in the treaty's language, resulting in vague and broad descriptions