X and Starlink face $1M in daily fines for alleged ban evasion in Brazil
(cnbc.com)45 points by JumpCrisscross 2 months ago | 100 comments
45 points by JumpCrisscross 2 months ago | 100 comments
dangrossman 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Cloudflare already isolated X on their network so that Brazil can block just X again.
opello 2 months ago | root | parent |
It would be interesting to see how fast Brazilian network operators are changing things to implement the blocking and responding to things like that.
vitorgrs 2 months ago | root | parent |
Most ISPs already blocked X again in this morning.
vitorgrs 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
They are not blocking Cloudflare or Fastly.
They are blocking X IPs being used on Cloudflare and Fastly.
These CDNs agreed with Anatel, to reserve IPs exclusively to X, so IPs can block X without collateral damage, that's all.
That said, Cloudflare is also blocking X. Cloudflare Warp doesn't open X.com anymore, neither iCloud Relay's (which seems to use Cloudflare).
opello 2 months ago | root | parent |
> These CDNs agreed with Anatel, to reserve IPs exclusively to X, so IPs can block X without collateral damage, that's all.
Thanks, the article didn't say anything like that. It, of course, makes sense to avoid the obvious collateral damage. It didn't seem like it started out that way based on this article though:
> X recently moved to servers hosted by Cloudflare and appeared to be using dynamic internet protocol addresses that constantly change...
toomuchtodo 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
Nation states will always win against a corporation. They are authorized to use force, both physical and economical. They also control access to their market.
opello 2 months ago | root | parent |
I don't think it's always true. It seems like it would have to depend on how the nation state responds to its citizens when the nation state does things like break large portions of the web. And what actual economic leverage the state has (or could bring to bear) over the company.
Losing the citizenry might be more politically damaging faster than economically damaging to X/Starlink.
toomuchtodo 2 months ago | root | parent |
> Losing the citizenry might be more politically damaging faster than economically damaging to X/Starlink.
Provide evidence Brazil will lose the citizenry over this. It appears that Brazil has been surgical in directing access restrictions to X; millions of X social followers have moved to Bluesky [1], and while Starlink customers might be impacted (~250k terminals) who cannot access X, they are not a majority in any sense (based on ground station count; 250k vs a Brazil population of 215.3 million people).
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. It's also easy to get caught in the trap to believe that other people think how one's own self thinks [2].
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
> Provide evidence Brazil will lose the citizenry over this.
Just this month, people literally got out of their homes, went out and onto the street, assembled and protested this judge, demanding his impeachment. This happened in seven of our capitals.
https://www.ft.com/content/142a6d95-b06e-47e3-a605-a203e2bc4...
https://apnews.com/article/brazil-musk-x-moraes-bolsonaro-sa...
https://g1.globo.com/jornal-nacional/noticia/2024/09/07/mani...
While this was going down, the judge was apparently attending a barbecue with the ruling party. They made fun of the protesters. "Your homages have already begun", they are reported to have said to him.
toomuchtodo 2 months ago | root | parent |
These were the same Bolsonaro supporters who lost in the most recent election, yeah? A few thousand people in the streets is not material support in a country of 200M people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_Brazilian_general_electio...
From your AP News citation:
> Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered X’s nationwide ban on Aug. 30 after months of feuding with Musk over the limits of free speech. The powerful judge has spearheaded efforts to ban far-right users from spreading misinformation on social media, and he ramped up his clampdown after die-hard Bolsonaro supporters ransacked Congress and the presidential palace on Jan. 8, 2023, in an attempt to overturn Bolsonaro’s defeat in the presidential election.
opello 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
I didn't claim that Brazil would lose the citizenry or anything about this specific situation. I disagree, generally, that nation states can always win against corporations. But maybe it's more a question of time frame.
DuPont adversely affecting the environment and ultimately people during the manufacture of Teflon is a ready example. It's a loss due to decades of severe impact. Regulatory capture and banking also comes to mind as a loss also given the number of people pushed to economic ruin because of it.
I'm curious where you think I made an extraordinary claim? I'm also curious what comes across as so biased?
ein0p 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
None of this is “well conceived”. De Moraes is way too high on his own supply.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
[flagged]
jdminhbg 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
> He's just enforcing the law in Brazil
It's really instructive to see how quickly people will abandon any pretense of liberal society when they have a personal animus against the ox currently being gored.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
When the person named is spending their days making childish AI images of the judge behind bars, is it not reasonable to cite them directly?
jdminhbg 2 months ago | root | parent |
No, it's not reasonable to abandon the pretense of liberal society because someone made childish AI images.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
I mean if you need to set up a straw man that large I suppose it isn't
Veserv 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
Exactly. Elon Musk said you have to be braindead [1] to prefer being banned in a country over honoring censorship requests by the government. But he immediately abandoned any pretense of that position due to his personal animus against the government of Brazil.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
Don't forget them quietly deleting Elon's "secret master plan" about climate change [1] because Elon decided that oil and gas are OK, actually [2]
[1] https://futurism.com/the-byte/tesla-deletes-elon-musk-master...
[2] https://www.bncnnews.com/2023/12/elon-musk-asserts-oil-and-g...
ivewonyoung 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
Here's a good explanation of how the Brazilian Supreme Court did a creative and novel interpretation of the law to give itself powers to investigate and regulate the internet without law enforcement or legislative/executive involvent.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39966382
That's not enforcing the law.
As documented by the New York Times, the first thing the judge did after getting powers to censor was to call a Brazilian magazine article about the person that gave him those powers 'fake news' and got it removed. It later turned out that article was true so he had egg on his face and had to retract his censorship order.
> To run the investigation, Mr. Toffoli tapped Mr. Moraes, 53, an intense former federal justice minister and constitutional law professor who had joined the court in 2017.
> In his first action, Mr. Moraes ordered a Brazilian magazine, Crusoé, to remove an online article that showed links between Mr. Toffoli and a corruption investigation. Mr. Moraes called it “fake news.”
> Mr. Moraes later lifted the order after legal documents proved the article was accurate.
johndevor 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
A fascist who is incredibly productive in the free market. That's a first!
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Incredibly productive? Twitter's value is down almost 90% since he took over
https://fortune.com/2024/08/15/elon-musk-tesla-stock-sale-tw...
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
Henry Ford anyone?
redundantly 2 months ago | root | parent |
Haha, or just about any other oligarch. Also, "free market" is equally laughable.
Such a silly comment.
mmooss 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
Musk is very unproductive in the social media market.
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
Political censorship is unconstitutional in Brazil. These judges are after Bolsonaro and his supporters for the political speech they engaged in. Blatant political censorship.
The constitution literally contains the words:
> Any and all censorship of political and artistic nature is prohibited
It's really not that hard to understand. Any citizen can understand this. It's just that it doesn't matter what the law says. Because there's no court above them, the law becomes whatever they say it is.
defrost 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Which parágrafos or incisos of the Constituição da República Federativa do Brasil
> literally contains the words:
cited in English?
Isn't political debate in Brazil sharply divided by selective absolute Constitionalism in any case?
Why leap to the defence of bad faith falsehoods spread by bad losers of a democratic election?
rdlw 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Article 220, Paragraph 2 of the official English version says that verbatim
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
Brazil is a Portuguese-speaking country. Obviously, the brazilian constitution is not written in English. I took the liberty of translating the passage so that people from this community would understand it.
You don't have to believe my translation. Here's a completely independent source I found by searching the web:
https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Brazil_2017
I will cite and copy the relevant parts from it.
TITLE II. FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND GUARANTEES
CHAPTER I. INDIVIDUAL AND COLLECTIVE RIGHTS AND DUTIES
Article 5
Everyone is equal before the law, with no distinction whatsoever,
guaranteeing to Brazilians and foreigners residing in the Country
the inviolability of the rights to life, liberty, equality, security
and property, on the following terms:
Term IX.
expression of intellectual, artistic, scientific, and communication activity
is free, independent of any censorship or license;
CHAPTER V. SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
Article 220
The expression of thoughts, creation, speech and information,
through whatever form, process or vehicle,
shall not be subject to any restrictions,
observing the provisions of this Constitution.
Paragraph 1.
No law shall contain any provision that may constitute
an impediment to full freedom of the press,
in any medium of social communication,
observing the provisions of art. 5°, IV, V, X, XIII and XIV.
Paragraph 2.
Any and all censorship of a political, ideological and artistic nature
is forbidden.
The terms referenced by the above paragraph: Term IV.
manifestation of thought is free, but anonymity is forbidden;
Term V.
the right of reply is assured, in proportion to the offense,
as well as compensation for pecuniary or moral damages
or damages to reputation;
Term X.
personal intimacy, private life, honor and reputation are inviolable,
guaranteeing the right to compensation for pecuniary or moral damages
resulting from the violation thereof;
Term XIII.
exercise of any job, trade or profession is free,
observing the professional qualifications that
the law establishes;
Term XIV.
access to information is assured to everyone,
protecting the confidentiality of sources
when necessary for professional activity;
It's really not that hard to read and understand these words. Surely you'll agree that there is not a single case here that says these judges get to censor anyone for any reason at all. If a brazilian is harmed by speech, he gets to answer and to be made whole by compensation, financial or otherwise. He does not get to censor the other guy. I simply cannot find in this entire text a single exception that would allow censorship.Debating these points here on HN, I've had people cite lesser laws than the constitution, I've had people get into incredibly pedantic arguments over how it's ackshually not really censorship when you delete the political opposition's social media, I've had people appeal to authority, I've had people call me a moron. I've never, not once, had them point out to me where in the fuck it says, in the above text, that these judges can do what they're doing.
> Isn't political debate in Brazil sharply divided by selective absolute Constitionalism in any case?
The whole point of my comments is that everything in this country is like that. Even the supreme court judges, whose literal job is to interpret and apply the constitution, are like that. They "selectively and creatively interpret" the constitution.
This country has no laws. Only the whims of these judges.
> Why leap to the defence of bad faith falsehoods spread by bad losers of a democratic election?
I "leap" to the defense of so called "falsehoods" because I see several things wrong with your loaded question.
This country is not a democracy, it's a dictatorship of the judiciary. Calling what we had an "election" is an insult to elections, it was more like a circus. I do not believe for a second that there was fraud in the US elections, but here the "bad losers" had plenty of reasons to doubt the results, among them the blatant political censorship perpetrated by the very same judges involved in this case.
I was going to elaborate on the above points but ultimately decided against it due to how fruitless it usually is. At this point I wouldn't be surprised if I saw HNers defending the communist Venezuelan dictator's "reelection" and calling the opposition he murdered and exiled "bad losers".
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
> Blatant political censorship.
Shutting down businesses (not speeches, they aren't keeping pro-lula Twitter accounts up while censoring conservative ones) for refusing to comply with the law isn't censorship.
Censoring books in public library is censorship though, and Musk supported De Santis anyway.
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
> keeping pro-lula Twitter accounts up while censoring conservative ones
Funny. Among the accounts targeted by this judge, not a single one is pro-Lula. Really curious, indeed. Are these guys saints? Are they literally never wrong on the internet?
Not too long ago, one of Lula's ministers "disseminated" some serious "misinformation". She literally said about a hundred million brazilians are starving to death right now. Where's the judge's fact checking? I wonder.
I mean, Lula himself has admitted to journalists that he just makes up statistics on the spot. You'd think he'd be this judge's worst enemy, given how gung-ho he is about "misinformation"... Oh shit, is that the judge attending a barbecue with Lula and his allies? Whew, lad. What do you know?
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent |
You're conflating two different things:
- broad Twitter ban (which is the topic of TFA), which itself results from Twitter refusal to cooperate with Brazilian justice.
- prosecutions related to the attempted coup in Brasilia, which includes activities on Twitter (and obviously there isn't a single pro-lula in the list of people involved, like there's no Bidden supporters among the people charged for Jan 6th, and it's not a conspiracy against republicans …).
Big corporations aren't exempted from laws and they cannot unilaterally decide not to comply with Court's order, whatever you think about the order in the first place. And the reason why Musk doesn't comply with Brazilian justice isn't free speech, as he's eager to comply with authoritarian regimes all around the world, he's just doing that for political motives.
Reminder: you'll get censored on Twitter if you type the word “cisgender" and Musk supported Ron De Santis censoring books in libraries, and also canceled Tesla orders from people after they criticized him personally: Musk doesn't give a shit about freedom of speech, he just claim he does hopping enough idiots will buy it against all evidence.
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
I'm not "conflating" anything. The "fake news" nonsense has been on-going since 2019. The persecution of the brazilian right has been on-going since the lead up to the 2022 elections at the very least, possibly earlier. The events that led to the order to ban X began in 2019 and accelerated in 2022. He's been ordering the banishment of political accounts since before the election. I know because I was commenting on the situation here on HN the whole time.
None of these things should have happened in the first place. Twitter should never have been banned because the judge should never have ordered the censorship of those accounts to begin with. There should have been no order for him to defy in the first place.
You may legally object to what Musk did based on the judge's authority. The point is I have zero moral objections to it. Illegal orders must not be obeyed. "Just following orders" has not been a valid excuse for anything since nazis were hanged at Nuremberg. And I do believe this judge's orders are illegal. He just gets away with it because there's nobody above him to put a stop to it.
I don't particularly care about Twitter or how hypocritical Musk is. No doubt he has plenty of self-serving reasons for defying the judge. The fact that a judge ordered him to censor political accounts over "misinformation" nonsense is what matters here. Musk can do whatever he wants on his platform, I don't care. Judges ordering censorship of politicians? I absolutely do care. Censorship is when the government shows up and deletes what you said. And censorship equals dictatorship, it's that simple. It's undeniable evidence that brazilians are living under a dictatorship.
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent |
What you're writing is incredible honestly.
You say Brasil is a dictatorship, yet we're talking about a country where the current president is a left wing guy coming back to power after his party being beaten by the right wing previous president and been jailed himself for corruption charges which eventually got dismissed.
It's the kind of thing that doesn't exist in dictatorship. In a dictatorship
- there's no such thing as a former president doing a comeback
- no former president goes to jail when his party is in power, or that's because he got betrayed by his own party
- there's no political switch between parties with such a dramatic different world views
> Censorship is when the government shows up and deletes what you said. And censorship equals dictatorship
Your definition of censorship is delusional: freedom of speech, like any freedom, can never be absolute, and it's always and everywhere regulated by laws.
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
... The former president made a "comeback" ? Yeah... Because of these judges.
They erased his crimes. They released him from prison. They persecuted anyone who called him corrupt. Hell they even gave back the corruption money. They allowed him to run for president. They did everything in their power to make sure he won. Then they banned from politics the only guy who ever managed to pry the worker's party from power.
Then they went to public events to openly brag about it. Supposedly impartial judge goes out and literally says "we have defeated bolsonarism", other judges put out statements literally spelling it out for you that "Lula is president today due to the decisions of the supreme court". Then they start persecuting Bolsonaro and his supporters. Leading us to this very moment where Twitter gets blocked nation wide for failure to comply with their censorship orders.
I actually wish I was delusional. I wish I was just hallucinating all this nonsense. Then I could just take some antipsychotics and everything would be fixed. Unfortunately it's not that easy.
> Your definition of censorship is delusional
It's not my definition.
Read the very simple words written on the constitution.
> Any and all censorship of political and artistic nature is prohibited
The accounts here were engaged in political speech.
Blocking their accounts for that speech absolutely does match the "any and all censorship of political nature" clause.
Nowhere does it say that the judge gets to censor them if they engage in "fake news" or whatever.
Therefore what the judge did is unconstitutional.
Before the elections I witnessed them censor a political documentary before it was even published. Without ever watching the thing, they decided it was "fake news" and stopped its publication. A priori censorship, something not seen in these lands since last century's military dictatorship. An obviously biased political documentary that nobody cares about and only a fool would believe to begin with... Their censorship of it was what made me realize the truth.
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent |
Wow, you're so deep into the conspiracy theory!
bryant 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
There's an argument to be made that lying to the public is not political speech.
Relevant analysis: https://misinforeview.hks.harvard.edu/article/framing-disinf...
ImJamal 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
I didn't read your link, but if political speech has to be honest then I'm sure all of the politicians in Brazil are going to have their speech censored, right?
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
Of course. Brazilian politicians, even the literal brazilian government's official accounts, used to get fact checked on X on a pretty much daily basis. I have videos of our current president straight up admitting to a journalist that he invents numbers on the spot.
These are the "authorities" who would presume to condemn you for posting "fake news". In the 2022 elections, I witnessed these judge-kings censor people for associating Lula with the Venezuelan dictator. Then I had to watch him literally roll out the red carpet for that very same dictator only months into his mandate. More recently I watched as he supported the dictator's "election".
bpodgursky 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
[flagged]
dang 2 months ago | root | parent |
Can you please stick to the site guidelines? You broke them here (and in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41457274 as well).
If you wouldn't mind reviewing https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and taking the intended spirit of the site more to heart, we'd be grateful.
ein0p 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
You’re misunderstanding who’s the “fascist” here. It’s not Musk. We get it, you don’t like his tweets or success, but he’s right in this case.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
What success? Twitter is down nearly 90% since he took over!
https://fortune.com/2024/08/15/elon-musk-tesla-stock-sale-tw...
redundantly 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
I don't know much about Brazil , nor the background on this story, however even if Musk is in the right here, that doesn't make him any less of a fascist.
There isn't always a good and bad guy in these situations. Corrupt people and organisations can and often do oppose each other.
rvz 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
> "How? He's just enforcing the law in Brazil"
> "Elon is the one who cut off Twitter's 5th biggest market because misinformation is the opium of fascist-wannabees like him"
You don't seem to be sure on what is going on or even know what 'fascist' means.
Anything can be declared as "misinformation" these days which is the what many governments commonly use to enforce censorship and for its citizens to continue to believe one narrative for governments to then continue to lie to its citizens.
Why do you want this?
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
If someone tells me the sky is blue, and then someone else tells me the sky is purple, I'm not going to believe it's purple just because "the government" tells me the weather forecast
HideousKojima 2 months ago | root | parent |
That's something you can vetify yourself though. What if the government claimed that Polish soldiers attacked the German border, you claimed that it was actually German soldiers in Polish uniforms to give Germany a casus belli to invade, and a court censored your claim because they insist it's misinformation? How the hell is the average citizen going to determine what is misinformation or not there if any counterarguments or evidence are censored?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gleiwitz_incident
I have a hard time believing you're this naive about this. Either you really haven't thought through the repercussions, or you're in favor of it because it's being used against your political enemies (for now).
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
I'd counter that simply asserting that the Brazilian government is in the wrong over Elon Musk is a fools errand.
I'm far more concerned about disinformation peddled by oligarchs like Rupert Murdoch. But while we're citing history
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Opinion_(book)
This book is so old it's legally in the public domain. Perhaps give it a read
jsight 2 months ago | prev | next |
This seems like a worthwhile fight. I'm surprised to see someone taking it up, though, most of the time company's just seem to comply with government mandated censorship.
o11c 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
You do realize that the "censorship" being mentioned is of literal terrorists?
Terrorism: the use of violence to achieve political aims (if you are not yourself a recognized nation).
This is exactly what these people did in their coup attempt. I for one would rather not have another coup organized on Twitter, thank you very much.
(and before anyone brings it up - even if someone works for the PR or leadership arms of a terrorist organization, rather than actually performing the violence personally, that does not mean they stop being a terrorist)
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
There was no "coup attempt". There was a protest. Like many before it. Brazilians occupying Brasília buildings is essentially the standard brazilian protest. There's just no way you can convincingly claim that a thousand people armed with flags and bibles amounts to a coup or even an attempt at one. The only thing they did which you might object to was beg the military to launch an intervention.
The legal basis for that is a bit of brazilian law that dates back to our independence. It says the military is the so called "4th power", the "moderator power" which is supposed to intervene if the balance between the other three democratic powers gets too screwed up. That's exactly the situation we find ourselves in: unelected judge-kings that legislate and run the country. These protesters tried to invoke that bit of law by asking the brazilian military to intervene and put an end to it. They did not try to seize power for themselves, they asked the military to do it. The military refused to do it. Then they were arrested. Then the judges put them in a gulag.
Your comments have helped me in the past. Sad to see that you believe in this narrative.
o11c 2 months ago | root | parent |
If it looks like a coup and quacks like a coup, don't tell me it's actually a sedan.
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
Can we not use duck typing logic to interpret the politics of a nation?
They called the impeachment of one of our former presidents in 2016 a coup too. In fact, they still call it that to this day. It led to one of the Brasília protests to which I alluded in my reply. Amusingly, even back then there were calls for mililitary intervention. Those were never a big deal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015–2016_protests_in_Brazil
What these judges did certainly looks like a coup to me. As far as I'm concerned, they gave themselves limitless powers and installed a dictatorship of the judiciary in this country. There's no point in electing representatives when these unelected judge-kings "creatively interpret" the laws they create however they want. What you're calling a coup, I see as a desperate failed attempt to restore order to this place.
See how fruitless it is? Everything looks like a coup to somebody.
andsoitis 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
> you do realize that the "censorship" being mentioned is of literal terrorists?
I don't follow this very closely, but I wonder: if the Brazilian state or justice system consider them terrorists, what is getting in the way of bringing them to justice?
o11c 2 months ago | root | parent |
Their version of January 6 took place after ours, so they're still going through early stages of the process. At least 86 have been convicted and sent to prison so far, likely low-level stooges since the higher-ups take longer.
infotainment 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
Remember kids, free speech means that everyone is contractually obligated to algorithmically broadcast everything you say, even if it is literal terrorism, to as many people as possible. Failure to do this is literally 1984.
(/s)
holmesworcester 2 months ago | root | parent |
So you think only government censorship is a speech violation?
Well cool! You'll happen to be on the right side in this case, because in this case the censor is a government.
infotainment 2 months ago | root | parent |
Well, perhaps I layered in too much sarcasm, but the idea is that it's not a free speech violation for the government to say someone can't post on social media. That person is still free to say it, just not to have it broadcast to everyone.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
"Censoring" literal misinformation is a bad thing now?
johndevor 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Putting "literal" in front of a word does not clarify the definition of that word.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
https://time.com/7016537/brazil-blocks-elon-musk-x-twitter-c...
Brazil's judge lays it out quite reasonably?
HideousKojima 2 months ago | root | parent |
I don't see any explanation in that article about what illegal "literal misinformation" Musk is allowing on X, so no it's not very reasonable.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
Apologies, it was a link from another article (hooray posting while on mobile!)
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5y3rnl5qv3o
>The row began in April, with the judge ordering the suspension of dozens of X accounts for allegedly spreading disinformation.
>Justice Moraes had ordered that X accounts accused of spreading disinformation - many supporters of the former right-wing president Jair Bolsonaro - must be blocked while they are under investigation.
HideousKojima 2 months ago | root | parent |
Still not seeing any explanation of what the supposed "literal misinformation" was in that article either.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
"Justice Moraes had ordered that X accounts accused of spreading disinformation"
Not sure how I can make it any clearer for you than that. Surely if they're innocent then the accounts can simply be reinstated?
HideousKojima 2 months ago | root | parent |
Oh, Judge Moraes said it's misinformation, so clearly it must actually be misinformation! Thank you so much for clearing that up!
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
Why do we have silly laws and courts? Obviously the world is black and white and puddle deep :)
ImJamal 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
It is. What you think is truth today can easily be considered misinformation tomorrow.
1270018080 2 months ago | root | parent |
I know in the post-truth era everyone can pretend their bubble is fact, but come on. Some things actually are misinformation.
ImJamal 2 months ago | root | parent |
Sure, somethings are actually misinformation. Nobody is denying that. The problem is giving the government the ability to determine what is and isn't misinformation.
If [politican you don't like] had the power to consider his misinformation to be truthful and truthful information to be misinformation would you still be in support of this? He could supress all the negative information about him calling it misinformation and prevent his misinformation from being banned.
1270018080 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
The misinformation and regulation dodging is happening right now, and the functioning Brazilian government is taking steps to stop it. So we should just be happy with the small win as a citizens of the world.
> If [politican you don't like] had the power to consider his misinformation to be truthful and truthful information to be misinformation would you still be in support of this?
If an evil person is trying to rewrite reality from their position of power, you'd hope the checks and balances in the government prevent them from doing so. While the Brazilian government can stop misinformation from spreading, they can also allow real information to continue to spread.
But if we go down this reductive doomsday scenario all the way to the bottom, where there are evil people stacked from top to bottom, your nation failed a long time ago. And maybe part of the blame sits on the people preaching do-nothingness and requiring a perfect system of laws and governance before taking action.
ImJamal 2 months ago | root | parent |
The constitution of Brazil explicitly protects political speech and makes no mention of exempting misinformation.
> Any and all censorship of a political, ideological and artistic nature is forbidden.
We should not be happy seeing a judge going after free speech that is explicitly protected by the constitution. This is a loss for the citizens of Brazil, not a win.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
So what happens when misinformation is posted and the corporation won't act to remove it?
In twitter's case, what happens when the corporation actively works to avoid accountability for it?
ImJamal 2 months ago | root | parent |
Nothing negative should happen to the company. In an ideal world the company should be lauded by everybody who values free speech for not bowing down to government censorship. The politicans supporting censorship should be voted out and the government should pay back any money it took in fines with interest. Those in the company who stood up for free speech should be given a medal by the new government.
Of course, we live in a society which loves censorship and hates free speech. Given the hatred of free speech we are seeing in this thread, I am guessing the ideal situation won't happen anytime soon.
IntelMiner 2 months ago | root | parent |
That's a very American view of "free speech"
ImJamal 2 months ago | root | parent |
It is also the view of the Brazilians? This is from their constitution:
> Any and all censorship of a political, ideological and artistic nature is forbidden.
They seem to be quite explicit and make no exemption for misinformation.
HideousKojima 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
Yes, because who gets to decide what is or is not misinformation?
nathanaldensr 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Essentially, the larger the scope/influence is of the body of people deciding what speech to censor, the more dangerous it is to give them that power. This is irrespective of the actual information being censored.
Emiledel 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
I feel for your pain, and I'm interested in paths that overcome the collapse of trust we're going through. I think your question matters a lot, to reach solutions all of us need (and not quit until we find a positive one)
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
Misinformation... According to whom?
You?
These partisan judge-kings?
Politicians who lie pathologically?
So who gets the honor of being the ministry of truth?
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent |
[flagged]
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
There goes good faith.
For the record, I don't really support that coward. I had all but forgotten about his existence until you posted this reply. My opinion of him is the only thing he's got going for him is the fact he's not a socialist, and that this alone makes him better than Lula or any of his communists any day of the week. Make no mistake: this is very faint praise. Being better than literal socialists and communists is a very low bar to clear.
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent |
I live how right-wing guys would call any of their opponent a “communist”, even Joe Bidden got called a socialist by some republicans…
Believe it or not, but social democracy based on welfare state (which has nothing to do with Communism) is the only thing that works. (And ironically that what defeated the communist ideology).
The fact that its opponents have to conflate it with Communism as their only argument shows all that needs to be about their reasoning.
matheusmoreira 2 months ago | root | parent |
... Except I'm not calling Joe Biden a communist.
I'm calling Lula a communist. He calls himself one. As does the judge he appointed to the supreme court. They even cheered when it happened: "finally we have a communist in the supreme court". Are you actually claiming that these people are not socialists?
I don't even need to discuss their obviously socialist ideologies. There is no need to interpret veiled implications, no need to make any inferences. They straight up use these words to describe themselves. Are you seriously going to contradict their own words on the matter?
If we cannot find common on ground on even such basic facts, then there's no point in any further discussion. Peace out.
fragmede 2 months ago | root | parent |
The Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea and the Democratic Republic of the Congo would like to have a word with you.
matheusmoreira a month ago | root | parent | next |
You know, it's funny.
Democracy is essentially a prerequisite for a nation to be considered civilized in the 21st century. Obviously, they claim to be a democracy. They clearly aren't. Nobody believes them.
Socialism and communism are failed ideologies that degenerate into dictatorships. They have never worked anywhere in the world, not even once. These people have every incentive in the world to hide their ideology and pretend that it's actually something else. But they don't. They're proud of their communism nonsense. They'll tell you to your face about their socialist ideals. I have videos of our current president giving lengthy speeches on the subject matter. I remember one particularly troublesome video he made just before the elections where he straight up said the state should confiscate everybody's inheritances and give you nothing but what you need to survive.
But somehow it's news to people, the fact these guys are socialists. I have to point it out constantly. People inevitably respond with skepticism. I have to cite evidence every single time. And when I do cite all the things which back up my world view, people just ignore all of it and call me a conspiracy theorist. Like the other guy did in this comments section.
littlestymaar 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
Yeah, he's probably the kind of guy who believes Hitler was a socialist because there's “socialist” in the Nazi party name.
dhosek 2 months ago | prev | next |
The tone of the responses from X have changed a great deal since the whole thing began. There’s much less of a confrontational approach, presumably because given the declines in revenues, they’re realizing they can’t afford more of it.
mmooss 2 months ago | root | parent |
What should be shocking business is right in front of our noses: Other reports say investors in Musk's aquisition of Twitter are on the hook for billions of dollars.
How do they (and other investors in X) stand by while Musk sacrifices large markets for personal political battles? It's not just Brazil - look at how he gives up advertising revenue in order to promote far-right hate speech on X.
More broadly, if a corporation invests in DEI or ESG, which are relatively cheap, there's an uproar that it's not appropriate for businesses. If Musk (or others) lose large amounts for partisan political battles, it's accepted. In part I'm just saying the obvious: the uproars about DEI and ESG is has nothing to do with business or profits, and is really about reactionary politics. On the other hand, it's still shocking that investors give sacrifice this much money for Musk's and other people's partisan 'cause'.
Perhaps they feel they have much wealth to gain from the 'cause', which arguably is about big business and wealth seizing political power (see the Lewis Powell memo and, for example: https://the.levernews.com/master-plan/ ).
vesrah 2 months ago | prev | next |
How do they plan on collecting on that if the money is moved out of Brazilian accounts?
davidsojevic 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
According to the article, they've previously collected by just withdrawing money directly from X's and/or Starlink's local accounts:
> Brazil previously withdrew money for fines it levied against X from the accounts of X and Starlink at financial institutions in the country.
vesrah 2 months ago | root | parent |
I saw that, but I was curious once X decides to pull the money from the accounts (assuming they can, which I guess is a big assumption at this point).
adrr 2 months ago | root | parent | next |
Starlink is still active in Brazil.
mgiampapa 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
If the fines don't get paid those Space X ground stations can possibly go away too.
kobalsky 2 months ago | root | parent | prev | next |
Could they get sued in a different country? I know when Argentina defaulted on bonds a naval ship was impounded in Ghana https://archive.is/Q7pB9
asadotzler 2 months ago | root | parent | prev |
SpaceX has physical infrastructure in Brazil worth millions. They can start there, just confiscate the Starlink ground stations.
2 months ago | prev | next |
srameshc 2 months ago | prev | next |
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7e 2 months ago | prev |
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opello 2 months ago | next |
> Brazil's national telecommunication agency, Anatel, has been ordered by de Moraes to prevent access to the platform by blocking Cloudflare as well as Fastly and EdgeUno servers, and others that the court said had been "created to circumvent" a suspension of X in Brazil.
Blocking Cloudflare and Fastly seems like a reactionary measure that is not exactly well conceived.