Cyprus Weighs Limits on Real-Time Police Alerts After EU Court Ruling

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New EU case law lets member states restrict real-time police check alerts, and Cyprus is examining its next step.

Navigation apps that alert drivers to nearby police checks are entering a new regulatory era. A ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union has confirmed that member states may restrict real-time alerts revealing the location of roadblocks, mobile speed cameras and alcohol tests, and Cyprus is now considering which model to adopt.

What the court decided

The case originated in France and concerned Coyote, a service that operates much like Waze, with users alerting one another to accidents, traffic congestion, obstacles and police presence.

The French authorities have the power to ask such services to temporarily suspend information that reveals police operations, for example when a suspect is being sought, when there is a terrorist threat, or during checks linked to serious crime. The court ruled that a state may do so, provided the measures are targeted, temporary and proportionate.

The ruling also carries a significant secondary point: it limits the standard argument by platforms that they are subject only to the rules of the country in which they are established. The position that a company based elsewhere falls outside national law is now considerably harder to sustain.

What stays and what changes

The ruling does not affect navigation itself. Traffic updates remain, as do alerts for accidents, closed roads, roadworks, stationary vehicles and objects on the carriageway.

The contested element is specific: the precise, real-time location of police officers, mobile cameras and checks. A distinction also applies between fixed speed cameras, which remain in the same location for years and are widely known, and alerts indicating that a roadblock has just been set up or that a specific vehicle is being sought.

How other countries regulate alerts

France operates the most structured system in Europe. Apps may not display the exact position of a camera and instead show wider danger zones, indicating that a check exists somewhere within the area. During sensitive police operations, the authorities may request the temporary suppression of reports in a specific region, while the app continues to function normally.

Germany places responsibility on the driver rather than the platform. An app may be installed on a phone, but using its camera warnings, whether for fixed or mobile cameras, is prohibited while driving.

Switzerland applies the strictest regime. The use and distribution of systems warning of speed checks is banned, covering devices, GPS units, apps and even stored databases of check locations. Penalties include confiscation of the device, fines and, in certain cases, destruction of the equipment. Drivers travelling to Switzerland are advised to disable such functions before crossing the border.

Greece has taken a different route, targeting organised online communities rather than navigation apps. The authorities have moved against large messaging groups in which thousands of users exchanged information on traffic police roadblocks and alcohol tests. These networks operated as a continuous, live map of police presence, demonstrating that the issue extends beyond navigation apps to groups on Viber, Telegram and WhatsApp.

The options for Cyprus

The European ruling does not automatically change how apps operate in Cyprus. For restrictions to apply, the Republic of Cyprus must decide what it wishes to limit, establish the legal framework and follow the relevant European procedures.

Three scenarios are under consideration. The first is the deactivation of reports on police presence and mobile checksonly. The second is the French model, replacing exact locations with broader control zones. The third is the temporary suppression of alerts during serious police operations.

Technically, any restriction can apply solely to Cyprus. Changes are implemented with geographic limitations, meaning the same app can function differently in each country according to its legislation.

The arguments on both sides

The authorities argue that drivers who know where police are located reduce speed for a few hundred metres before accelerating again, that drivers who have consumed alcohol use alerts to avoid breath tests, and that wanted individuals change route upon seeing a roadblock on screen. On this reasoning, the alerts can serve as a tool for evading the law rather than for road safety.

The counterargument is that alerts make drivers more cautious and reduce speed, even locally, and that the apps also warn of genuine, immediate hazards such as accidents, stationary vehicles, flooded roads and objects on the carriageway. The central question is which functions serve safety and which merely assist in avoiding the police, and it is on this line that any restrictions will be judged.

What happens next

Navigation, traffic information and warnings of genuine hazards remain in place. What changes is the balance of power, with states gaining greater authority to determine what appears on a driver's screen. For Cyprus, the discussion has only begun, and the question is no longer whether measures will be introduced but which model will be chosen. Until then, Waze continues to operate as drivers know it.