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Some key points from the article, translated...

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  It was in a nearly empty senate that around thirty deupties
  cast their votes [...] on the installation of "black boxes",
  a controversial device designed to monitor internet traffic.
  [It was] approved by 25 deupties to 5 following heated debates.

  The plan: to force ISPs to "detect, through automated
  processing, a suspect succession of connection data" that
  appear to match patterns typically used by terrorists. In 
  practice, this would involve installing a "black box" at ISPs
  to monitor traffic. The content of the communications would
  not be monitored, but only the metadata: the sender or
  receiver of a message, the IP address of a visited site...

  [...]

  "The black box is the Pandora's box of this draft law," said
  socialist Aurélie Filippetti in the senate. "They say that the
  masses of data that will flow through it will only contain
  metadata. But they contain even more information about the
  private lives of our fellow citizens! [...] And there is a
  paradox in saying that these data will be anonymous when they
  are to be used to identify terrorists".

  An accusation that was then defended by the government in the
  house, "The automated processing marks out suspect behaviour,
  not pre-identified persons," emphasized the Defence Minister,
  Jean-Yves Le Drian, "It is after that the services are able to
  access the identity of the persons."

  [...]

  Some deputies also pointed out the "economically damaging"
  consequences of these black boxes, such as the ecologist
  Isabelle Attard, for whom "French IT companies will see their
  foreign clients start to desert them as they lose their trust".
  Last week, seven large French hosts made their opposition to the
  draft clear, stating that it would push them "into exile" so as
  not to lose their clients.

  [...]

  The government nevertheless eluded the more technical questions
  throughout the debate, asked, several times, by a few deputies,
  among those was Laure de la Raudière (UMP), "Where are you going
  to install your probe on the communication networks?", "How will
  you optimize the algorithms?", "Will you use deep packet
  inspection?".

  Bernard Cazeneuve ended up replying to this last question,
  repeated several times by the deputy, "We will not use this
  technique at all", a technique that involves the deep inspection
  [translation of a translation...] of all passing communications
  data.

  Several deputies have also demanded a precise list of the type of
  metadata collected by the black boxes to be clearly defined.
  In vain.
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