Document details

Watching the watchdogs: Spyware surveillance of journalists in Europe and the ongoing fight for accountability

Potsdam; Vienna: Friedrich Naumann Foundation;International Press Institute (IPI) (2024), 18 pp.
"The surveillance of journalists, including using spyware technology, poses a fundamental threat to media freedom, the digital safety of journalists, and source protection within the European Union. The agreement on the European Media Freedom Act in December 2023 offers some further protections against the fast evolving threat to journalists and their sources. Those involved in pushing the deal over the line and ensuring the removal of explicit references to national security in exemptions deserve credit. Yet the full impact of the Article 4 provisions – as all other new rules in the EMFA – remains to be seen and effective implementation will be vital. Greece and Hungary offer the strongest examples of why strong enforcement will be needed. However, both countries have already demonstrated how overly broad and vague exemptions for national security have already been used to justify the otherwise unjustifiable surveillance of journalists." (Conclusion)
A new era: green light for European Media Freedom Act (EMFA), 5
Predatorgate: the case of Greece, 7
Pegasus surveillance in Hungary, 12
Spyware cases across the EU, 17
Conclusion, 17
Recommendations, 18