Today, Interior Minister Mikael Damberg presented the government's new Law Council draft, which provides four law enforcement agencies with stronger tools to intercept, among other things, electronic communications in encrypted chats and insert Trojans into criminals' computers.

- It allows you to basically follow a person in real time, put on the camera and microphone to listen to everything being said in a room. There may be other people who are not suspected of crimes in that room. The technology enables a lot of privacy violations, says Anne Ramberg, who also sat as an expert in the investigation that preceded the government's decision.

Risking threat to democracy

She says that she understands the needs of the police, but that there are risks that the technology may be abused and that "somewhere in a society must draw a line".

- No one argues for integrity anymore, you have given it up. If you think about the book 1984 - we are there today. This can erode democracy and it allows for an abuse that risks the free conversation not taking place. If you look at developments in Europe, in the hands of a political majority that looks different than it is today, then freedom of speech and freedom of the press is the first thing to do.