Paris, 21 avril 2021
PRESS RELEASE
Connection data: the Council of State conciliates the implementation of
European Union law and the effectiveness of the fight against terrorism and
crime
Ruling on appeals lodged by several NGOs and a telecom operator, the Council of State
has examined the conformity with EU law of French rules on the retention of connection
data. It also verified that the implementation of EU law, as interpreted by the European
Court of Justice (ECJ) does not jeopardize the requirements of the French Constitution.
The Council of State rules that the existing threat to national security currently justifies
the generalized retention of data. It also notes that the possibility of accessing connection
data in order to fight serious crime allows, at the present time, the constitutional
requirements of preventing breaches of law and order and the tracking down of authors
of criminal offences to be ensured.
However, it orders the Government to reassess regularly the threat that exists in France
so as to justify the generalized retention of data and to submit the use of these data by
the intelligence services to clearance provided by an independent authority.
French law requires telecommunications operators to retain their users' connection data
for the purpose of fighting crime and terrorism
The use of connection data plays a major role in the search for criminal offences and in the
activities of intelligence services, particularly in order to fight terrorism. This data,
sometimes referred to as "metadata" to differentiate it from data which relate to the
content of exchanges, include three categories:
-
identity data, which allows the identification of the user of an electronic
communication system (for example, the first and last names linked to a telephone
number or the IP address through which a user is connected to the internet);
traffic data (sometimes called "fadettes"), which track the dates, hours and
recipients of electronic communications, or the list of websites consulted;
location data, which allows a device to be "marked" by the base station to which it
is connected.
-
-