No, people don't like this.

Most ordinary people don't but they still vote for authoritarian politicians who like it.

Most politicians don't support explicitly such measures. This is a technocratic law, result of a weak consensus in the EU. You don't vote for your Homeland Secretary minister. EU PM don't usually campaign for such issues. This is a failure of representative democracy.

A lot of people feel they have nothing to hide and don’t feel strongly one way or the other on privacy, but they do like feeling safe and secure from crime and “bad things”.

It’s a dangerous and destructive worldview, because they benefit immensely from the small percentage of society that absolutely does need privacy.

> A lot of people feel they have nothing to hide and don’t feel strongly one way or the other on privacy

People think that, but once you tell them they will lose their drivers license since they chatted to their spouse about bad eyesight they bark differently. Or shrug it off with "that will never happen to me" and you can start the "and then they came for the [next group], but I did nothing" line of talk.

Everyone has something to hide, they might just not know yet what it is but they will when the option to hide it has gone away. There is a reason my country stopped recording religion since 1946 in the citizen records, it was fine to do so decades before.

People don't but those with power (i.e. the people who matter) do.

Chinese ppl don't like this either.

It's teleco vendors, ISPs and govn't agencies are advocating this.