Brazilian court orders suspension of Elon Musk’s X after it missed deadline (www.theguardian.com)
from merde@sh.itjust.works to technology@lemmy.world on 30 Aug 2024 22:50
https://sh.itjust.works/post/24478719

Late on Friday afternoon, Justice Alexandre de Moraes – who has been engaged in a dispute with X’s owner, Elon Musk, since April – ordered the “immediate, complete and total suspension of X’s operations” in the country, “until all court orders … are complied with, fines are duly paid, and a new legal representative for the company is appointed in the country”.

He gave Brazil’s National Telecommunications Agency 24 hours to enforce the decision. Once notified, the agency must pass the order on to the more than 20,000 broadband internet providers in the country, each of which must block X.

In an interview with the TV channel Globonews, the agency’s president, Carlos Manuel Baigorri, said the order had already been passed on to internet providers.

“Since we’re talking about more than 20,000 companies, each will have its own implementation time, but … we expect that probably over the weekend all companies will be able to implement the block,” he said.

Justice Moraes also summoned Apple and Google to “implement technological barriers to prevent the use of the X app by users of the iOS and Android systems” and to block the use of virtual private network (VPN) applications.

The decision imposes a daily fine of R$50,000 (£6,800) on individuals and companies that attempt to continue using X via VPN.

#technology

threaded - newest

merde@sh.itjust.works on 30 Aug 2024 22:53 next collapse

sounds feasible except the “blocking the use of vpn apps” part?

EleventhHour@lemmy.world on 30 Aug 2024 23:44 next collapse

At best that’s just unclear. Blocking VPNs isn’t impossible, just impractical. And it’s not like Brazil just became China. At worst, the just made accessing X impracticality expensive for its users— which, in Brazil, is a lot of people. In typical Brazilian fashion, they’re hitting Elon in the wallet.

trolololol@lemmy.world on 04 Sep 2024 05:29 collapse

The main goal is to get the convicted offenders to not make posts anymore, and if they do the law will be able to find and punish them after the fact.

I’m talking about the accounts that the courts asked X to suspend but X denied.

Chozo@fedia.io on 30 Aug 2024 23:49 next collapse

Yeah, that line was particularly concerning. I'm all for watching Elon get a Brazilian beatdown, but that feels like a pretty large overstep.

merde@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 2024 00:18 collapse

Justice Moraes had also said that any person in Brazil who tried to still use X via common privacy software called a virtual private network, or VPN, could be fined nearly $9,000 a day. But after swift backlash across Brazil, including from academics who have supported him, he reversed that move in an amended order late Friday.

nytimes.com/…/brazil-elon-musk-x-blocked.html

ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 04:02 collapse

Good to see someone listening to people more knowledgeable than them.

new_guy@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 00:30 next collapse

Yeah, this left a bad taste.

At least he revoked this section of the decision a couple hours later.

el_hache@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 03:48 next collapse

He went back on that part (in Portuguese):

…com.br/…/moraes-mantem-suspensao-do-x-mas-recua-…

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 05:37 collapse

Why? VPN is not a magic bullet. Wait, did you believe their marketing??

merde@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 2024 14:21 collapse

can you elaborate?

as it is, your comment is not comprehensible. Why what? Whose marketing? Marketing for VPN? “Magic bullet” for what purpose?

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 15:33 collapse

VPNs can be blocked by governments or worse, the data can be decrypted giving you a false sense of security. In any case if the governments wants to it can easily see if you connect to a VPN and give you trouble just for that. Same goes for TOR.

merde@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 2024 16:13 collapse

TOR, you write. How are they going to block TOR?

when a government blocks one vpn server, another sprouts in its place. Not like some governments aren’t trying. Yes, they “give trouble” to some people in some places for VPN or TOR use but that may be preferable to those people, compared to what they may have to go through if their connection wasn’t encrypted.

here the question was about blocking VPNetworks to prevent Xitter use and that sounded implausible (the judge also understood this afterwards).

VPNs can be blocked by governments or worse, the data can be decrypted giving you a false sense of security.

How would they decrypt this data without having access to the VPN server itself (or probably your device)?

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 18:13 next collapse

The handful of people so addicted and desperate for xitter that they turn to TOR to get their daily dose of poison can probably just be ignored.

suction@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 2024 08:17 collapse

Never said they can block TOR. They run TOR entry nodes as honeypots. They run “cool looking” VPN servers as honeypots. They definitely have backdoors for many encrypted services. Dude, this isn’t 2005 anymore.

And don’t forget, authorities can and will use just metadata (what you connected to when) to prosecute you without ever caring what you actually transmitted.

But go ahead and call me clueless, I am not trying to educate here. Just annoyed that people trust these technologies so much without really understanding how they get caught.

merde@sh.itjust.works on 01 Sep 2024 10:19 collapse

Never said they can block TOR

that’s what my first comment you replied to was . I wrote that blocking VPN (or TOR) wasn’t feasible

VPNs can be blocked by governments or worse, the data can be decrypted giving you a false sense of security. In any case if the governments wants to it can easily see if you connect to a VPN and give you trouble just for that. Same goes for TOR.

👆

They run “cool looking” VPN servers as honeypots. They definitely have backdoors for many encrypted services. Dude, this isn’t 2005 anymore.

some authorities try to use metadata for prosecution, yes, but it doesn’t suffice. They have to correlate undeniably that metadata and whatever information they may have collected from other nonencrypted platforms.

one entry node on TOR that collects the crumbles that passes through this node… good luck to anybody trying to make sense of that mess.

But go ahead and call me clueless, I am not trying to educate here. Just annoyed that people trust these technologies so much without really understanding how they get caught.

I’ve been following these cases for years now, you write “i’m not trying to educate”, but it seems like you’re trying to inform the clueless among us about the dangers of using VPN or TOR. With a claim like that, it would be nice to have some reliable sources linked in your comments

suction@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 2024 20:01 collapse

Maybe you should provide sources for your hilarious stance that VPNs and TOR provide absolute protection for anyone in any situation. I guess the l33t hax0rz influencers you follow on TikTok told you to think that so now you want to defend VPNs and TOR against all critical thought wherever you can, and that’s cute as fuck, but those people are only trying to sell their VPN to you. Don’t be so naive, or are you 12?

merde@sh.itjust.works on 01 Sep 2024 22:58 collapse

i knew your reply would be of this kind

hide your ignorance and insufficiency using aggression, good strategy 👍

nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 30 Aug 2024 23:05 next collapse

Obrigado

yokonzo@lemmy.world on 30 Aug 2024 23:58 collapse

Tchau, Elon

EleventhHour@lemmy.world on 30 Aug 2024 23:44 next collapse

When you’re too corrupt, even for Brazil, that really does say something.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 00:10 next collapse

They’re more WhatsApp people than Twitter people anyway.

But this is pretty standard legal stuff. Musk just doesn’t think he has to send a lawyer down to argue his case. He can blow it off, thinking that he’s simply above the law.

It isn’t even corruption, per say. It’s just entitlement slamming into another state’s basic sovereignty.

EleventhHour@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 00:27 next collapse

Well, maybe I’m just too GenX, but, to me, that’s a distinction without a difference. WhatsApp is texting with extra steps, and Twitter is for Nazis. I’ve never used the former and gave up the latter along with FB and insta early on during covid. Reddit was my last social whatever, and I jumped that ship last June for this last shout.

I’ve never had tiktaky or snapsnore. Most of my time on my phone is spent either here or listening to news podcasts— which is pretty much what I did as a teenager: listening to NPR as my morning routine then a news/music mix throughout the day.

Hmmm…. How unusual and a little confusing to be both impressed and disappointed in oneself… well that’s why some of our best paid scientists are furiously genetically engineering new strains of cannabis! So I don’t have to deal with this shit!

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 01:47 collapse

WhatsApp is texting with extra steps, and Twitter is for Nazis.

No shortage of Nazis on Whatsapp. And not the Discount Donny Groypers, either. Real Boys From Brazil. People with an actual Nazi pedigree.

How unusual and a little confusing to be both impressed and disappointed in oneself

Eh. We all eat from the trough of ideology.

EleventhHour@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 02:37 collapse

lol, if you say so. I’m glad I’m not the only one who feels a little let down with myself ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

14th_cylon@lemm.ee on 31 Aug 2024 01:42 collapse

They’re more WhatsApp people than Twitter people anyway.

I thought they are orkut people?

Roldyclark@literature.cafe on 31 Aug 2024 01:46 collapse

Orkut lmao that’s a deep cut. Remember my Brasilian friend growing up using it and I was like wtf is this.

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 05:39 collapse

You know how Americans have ZERO base to stand on talking about other countries anymore? Didn’t get the memo? You guys are the bottom of the barrel now in every aspect. Sheesh.

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 2024 00:14 next collapse

I’m kind of on the fence with this one.

As much as I dislike Twitter/X and it’s owner; their ‘crime’ is refusing to silence the political opponents of those currently in power, then further refusing to pay fines for that decision… Decisions, at least in principle, I agree with.

That said: I haven’t actually seen the content that’s at the center of this dispute; the posts of those political opponents. I’m also not very familiar with Brazils politics, so perhaps there’s context I’m missing.

merde@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 2024 00:29 next collapse

musk has no problems with taking down political opponents’ xitter accounts when the request is coming from “right wing” governments (rather authoritarian or far-right)

he doesn’t care about freedom of speech, he only cares about his kind of speech. If he refused all take down requests, i would agree with you

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 2024 00:51 collapse

As far as I understand this is a right-wing authoritarian gov silencing left-wing opponent’s.

Am i mistaken?

/pre-post edit: Yes, yes I am.

That certainly throws out any bit of sympathy I may of had… Though I still think they made the right decision to refuse to comply.

¯\(-_-)/¯ oh well.

ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml on 31 Aug 2024 01:56 next collapse

their ‘crime’ is refusing to silence the political opponents of those currently in power

First they came for the christofascists who attempted a coup, and I didn’t speak out 😔

NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 04:37 next collapse

their ‘crime’ is refusing to silence the political opponents of those currently in power, then further refusing to pay fines for that decision…

Isn’t it natural: if you refuse to obey numerous court orders and pay your fines, you’ll get even worse court orders. This is not exactly the way to challenge the reasons for these other orders.

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 05:41 next collapse

If that’s what you think is wrong with Twitter, you might be one of the bad guys

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 2024 06:11 collapse

that’s what you think is wrong with Twitter

?

What is ‘that’ exactly…?

I’ve said nothing about what’s wrong with twitter. I’ve said I agree with refusing to silence political opposition for those in power, at least in principle. I’ve also, at least tried, to be pretty clear I’m likely missing some contex; so that may be a bit of a misinterpretation of the situation.

blaue_Fledermaus@mstdn.io on 31 Aug 2024 16:31 collapse

It seems that the strongest justification is that they closed their local branch, and have no legal representation here in Brazil, which is required by law for them to be able to operate.

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 2024 16:40 collapse

they closed their local branch

That was due to threats of arrest for not paying these fines, that were issued for refusing to silence critics.

I was trying to skip past all those middle steps and get to the root of the issue. What started it all.

Quicky@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 00:52 next collapse

Wait, there are 20,000 ISPs!?

Caligvla@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 31 Aug 2024 01:03 next collapse

I’m guessing they mean regional subsidiaries, Brazil is big, but not that big.

alphabethunter@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 2024 09:13 next collapse

Brazil has a lot of small, very small, ISPs. There was a law some time back that boosted the market for smaller ISPs. On my street I have a small ISP that only runs cables and internet to a portion of my neighborhood. However, those smaller ISPs are usually buying their connection from the few giant companies in the business and redistributing it through their own means. Crazy part though: often they have better prices and support when compared to the giant ISPs they’re buying their internet access from.

acockworkorange@mander.xyz on 03 Sep 2024 23:15 collapse

105% the landmass of the lower 48 states of USA.

eager_eagle@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 02:03 collapse

idk where that number came from, but there’s a survey from 2022 listing 11,630 providers. That would average 2.08 per municipality and makes sense imo. The larger-scale telecom infrastructure is still an oligopoly though.

clot27@lemm.ee on 31 Aug 2024 01:29 next collapse

Good

downpunxx@fedia.io on 31 Aug 2024 02:58 next collapse

"Alexandre de Moraes, the court’s top judge, has also ordered daily fines for people or businesses in Brazil that use virtual private networks (VPNs) or other methods to access X while the site is banned in the country"

how do they imagine vpn's work down there in ole brazil

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 31 Aug 2024 03:57 next collapse

Individuals will be nigh impossible to properly handle, but a registered business with a known presence on X won’t be difficult at all.

They aren’t saying they will fine for the use of VPNs, but the continued use of X through alternative means.

Linnce@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 14:29 collapse

They thankfully went back on the decision of blocking vpn

Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de on 31 Aug 2024 04:03 next collapse

Spread it to Everybody from Brazil: Leave Xitter, JOIN MASTODON!

How to join Mastodon:

www.followchain.org/join-mastodon/

powerofm@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 2024 05:02 next collapse

I think that site has incorrect information. They wrote “you need to sign up separately on every server on Mastodon to see their community posts” but surely that’s the opposite of what the fediverse is about? Mastodon’s server page even says that with a single account you can see everything.

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 05:40 collapse

How about not using “Social Media” at all? Too out there?

Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de on 31 Aug 2024 11:39 collapse

Are you aware that Lemmy is social media too?

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 11:57 collapse

Yes and I hate my guts I keep coming back to it

lennivelkant@discuss.tchncs.de on 31 Aug 2024 14:03 collapse

Then it seems like it’s too out there

blind3rdeye@lemm.ee on 31 Aug 2024 05:44 next collapse

There is some misleading information in there. Probably better to just get straight to the point with the ‘standard’ joinmastodon.org link.

Linnce@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 14:26 next collapse

People seem to be going to bluesky, even the president is there

GaMEChld@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 2024 20:21 collapse

Is Xitter pronounced Shitter? Makes South Park prophetic again.

Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de on 01 Sep 2024 20:51 collapse

Of course it is.

suction@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 05:36 next collapse

So if you’re are Brazilian nazi, go get a Windows phone

istanbullu@lemmy.ml on 31 Aug 2024 06:22 next collapse

joinmastodon.org

DudeDudenson@lemmings.world on 31 Aug 2024 14:06 next collapse

Gotta love the lemmy hive mind being pro censorship just to hate on elon

endofline@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 2024 14:38 next collapse

They gotta love my mailing lists. Backups stored on every subscriber hard drive

killabeezio@lemm.ee on 31 Aug 2024 14:40 next collapse

This has less to do with Elon and more to do with twitter itself. Why were other platforms created in the first place like Lemmy? Could it be to decentralize these platforms so that no one entity can control them, including the government? This whole shit show with Brazil shows us exactly why these platforms should exist. The oppression of the people need to stop.

Instead of complaining about others and offering no contributions to this platform, I’d love to hear your take on this and start an open discussion. It seems like you have something on your mind, so why not speak it?

merde@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 2024 14:46 next collapse

censorship of what? Twitter, now X?

when i was on twitter, before elon took it over, i remember reporting many openly fascist accounts and they used to regularly go down (to reappear under a different name with some new numbers attached). Hate speech, racist slurs, calls to violence… verbal scum. You call taking that shit down “censorship”?

Justice Alexandre de Moraes had issued a court order forcing the site formerly known as Twitter to block several users as part of his investigation into the former president Jair Bolsonaro’s attempts to stay in power after his 2022 election defeat.

theguardian.com/…/elon-musk-brazil-x-jair-bolsona…

it looks like they’re trying to protect their democracy? Shutting down a coup and it’s enablers (sounds familiar?) isn’t censorship.

Tja@programming.dev on 31 Aug 2024 18:53 collapse

It is when you’re on team coup…

BambiDiego@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 17:30 next collapse

Censorship isn’t the same as consequences.

tudor@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 18:30 collapse

salon.com/…/musks-x-censors-coverage-of-arlington…

Elon, free speech advocate, this you?

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 2024 18:10 next collapse

Lets hope the EU will follow soon. Brazil leads the way!

Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 2024 06:14 collapse

The brazil Judiciary want some profiles blocked. Is that what the EU should demand too?

Blocking profiles seems heavy handed, and best aimed at the individual, not the provider.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 2024 12:21 collapse

Well, there are quite some profiles doing nothing but spreading hate and misinformation in ways that exceed the limits of free speech, and blocking them would be a good way to stay within the law. Many European countries have quite strong opinions on people spreading Nazi propaganda, for example. Or call for committing crimes or bodily harm. The EU demands removal of such post and even accounts, but X is getting slower and more reluctant in following the laws. I think, banning X in the EU is overdue.

Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 2024 14:54 collapse

in ways that exceed the limits of free speech

I think this part is key. X is hiding behind US laws which Brazil and the EU have very little say in.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 2024 15:48 collapse

They can’t hide if they have presence in or provide for Brasil/EU.

Default_Defect@midwest.social on 31 Aug 2024 18:24 next collapse

Brazilian sounds like a lot.

Tja@programming.dev on 31 Aug 2024 18:52 collapse

It’s 7 times less than German

Xohoo@feddit.org on 02 Sep 2024 06:22 collapse

What are you talking about, brasil has 214m inhabitants. Germany 84m

Tja@programming.dev on 02 Sep 2024 06:41 collapse

…wikipedia.org/…/Brazil_v_Germany_(2014_FIFA_Worl…

Xohoo@feddit.org on 02 Sep 2024 06:44 collapse

Oh, right, forgot about this for a minute😅

BrownianMotion@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 2024 09:25 next collapse

To be fair, X didn’t “miss the deadline”.

They never gave a shit in the first place.

acockworkorange@mander.xyz on 03 Sep 2024 23:20 collapse

Late on Friday afternoon, Justice Alexandre de Moraes – who has been engaged in a dispute with X’s owner, Elon Musk, since April

A Justice isn’t in a dispute with anyone, Guardian. A Justice rules based on law. In the case of Brazil, the Justice system is based on Roman law, as opposed to Common law that is in effect in UK and USA. That means a judge has even less power, as they are tied to existing legislation and can’t rule unless there’s a specific codified law that allows them to rule in that way for that crime or misdemeanor.