"It (the exhibition) comes at just the right moment, because it is a time where France is thinking about and is engaging in legislative action on intelligence." Bertrand said. "And also at a time where France has suffered tragic attacks on its territory in the last few years," he added.
Six months after the January 2015 attacks on Charlie Hebdo magazine, the French parliament passed a law giving the state intelligence services more latitude to eavesdrop on the public. The law waives the need for judicial warrants to use phone taps, cameras, hidden microphones and other spying devices.
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