Mass surveillance of telecommunications document pool

In the law enforcement context, “data retention” refers to the mandatory retention by providers of electronic communications services (email, private messaging, internet access providers, etc.) of metadata of all their users only for law enforcement purposes. Because it is applied to everyone indiscriminately, it constitutes a mass surveillance measure. After the former Data Retention Directive was struck down by the CJEU in 2014 as it violated fundamental rights, the Commission is seeking to adopt new rules at EU level, posing a clear threat to everyone’s digital rights.

By EDRi · October 13, 2025

Extract

In the law enforcement context, “data retention” refers to the mandatory retention by providers of electronic communications services (email, private messaging, internet access providers, etc.) of metadata of all their users only for law enforcement purposes. Because it is applied to everyone indiscriminately, it constitutes a mass surveillance measure. After the former Data Retention Directive was struck down by the CJEU in 2014 as it violated fundamental rights, the Commission is seeking to adopt new rules at EU level, posing a clear threat to everyone’s digital rights.

Contents

Introduction

In the law enforcement context, data retention is a requirement obliging providers of electronic communications services (email, private messaging, internet access providers like telecom companies, etc.) – we call them ‘service providers’ (SPs) – to retain certain types of data related to their users beyond what is necessary for the provision of their services and only for law enforcement purposes.
The types of data retained are mainly traffic and location data. Traffic data is metadata about your online activities.

Whenever a device accesses a communications network, small packets of data related to that device’s activities are processed on the systems of the operator responsible for the network.
It is possible to learn A LOT about an individual’s movements, interests and social network from analysing metadata – even without ever accessing the actual content of their communications. It is well established that metadata can reveal information that is no less sensitive than the actual contents of communications.

In 2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) invalidated the old EU Data Retention Directive because it required a mass and indiscriminate retention of all traffic and location data, which was considered in violation of the Charter of Fundamental Rights. Unfortunately, since then, the vast majority of Member States have ignored the CJEU ruling(s) and maintained illegal national data retention laws.

A new legislative proposal has the potential to legalise (again) mass surveillance at the EU level and to undermine online privacy and other fundamental rights depending on it (freedom of assembly and association, of expression, etc.). Moreover it creates very serious cybersecurity risks as all the data retained is vulnerable to (increasing) cyberattacks.

Key legislative information and dates

Commission President’s political guidelines

In her 2024-2029 political guidelines, the President of the Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has announced that she wants “to provide law enforcement with adequate and up-to-date tools for lawful access to digital information, while safeguarding fundamental rights”. More specifically, in her mission letter to the candidate for the Home Affairs portfolio, Magnus Brunner, she indicated two objectives:

  1. an ‘update’ of law enforcement’s tools for access to digital data and
  2. ‘rules on data retention’.

Commission’s ProtectEU Internal Security strategy and Roadmap for effective and lawful access to data for law enforcement

Commission’s consultation

  • The lead European Commission department, DG HOME (Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs), launched a consultation process in May 2025.
  • [closed] Call for evidence – Feedback period: 21 May 2025 – 18 June 2025 (midnight Brussels time)
    • Feedback received
  • Public consultation – Consultation period: 20 June 2025 – 12 September 2025 (midnight Brussels time)
  • EDRi’s answering guide
  • According to the Commission’s webpage, the proposal(s) (whether legislative or non-legislative) will be released in the first quarter of 2026.

EDRi blogs and latest news

EDRi position on data retention

Official opinions

Evolution of CJEU jurisprudence

 

2014, Digital Rights Ireland CJEU declares the EU Data Retention invalid because it infringed the fundamental rights to privacy and data protection and failed to outline substantive and procedural conditions for access by law enforcement.
2016, Tele2/Watson CJEU confirms that national legislation establishing mass data retention is contrary to EU law. Access to retained data must be restricted to fighting serious crime, with prior review by a court or an independent administrative authority.
2020, Privacy International and La Quadrature du Net I 
  • Mass data retention is possible if there is a genuine, present or foreseeable threat to national security.
  • Targeted retention is possible if limited to specific groups of individuals or geographic areas.
  • General retention of IP addresses is possible solely for the fight against serious crimes.
  • These processing activities must be limited in time to what is necessary.
2022, SpaceNet  CJEU confirms its previous case-law and declares mass data retention contrary to EU law even for short retention periods (4 or 10 weeks)
2024, La Quadrature du Net II (HADOPI) CJEU accepts that the retention of IP addresses is no longer a serious interference with fundamental rights by default. Therefore it accepts their general retention even for petty offences and police access without prior independent review in certain cases.

Terminology

Metadata
This includes all other information about a communication other than the communications content, such as the communication’s origin (who sent it?), the destination (who is the recipient?), the route, the time, the date, the size (of the message), the duration (of the activity), or the type of underlying service. Metadata can be compared to the information outside an envelope (address, weight, format, stamps, etc.), while the communications content corresponds to the message inside the envelope.

CJEU
The Court of Justice of the European Union was asked multiple times by national courts to interpret the

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