pull down to refresh

X is banned in Brazil but how did we get here? Let me explain.
The surge in popularity of the populist-right is happening all over the world. it was not different in Brazil. With the presidential election of Jair Bolsonaro in 2018 there was a coordenated push to over-extend government powers over social media.
In the mean time, Elon Musk acquired Twitter, which he soon renamed as X.
The Supreme Court of Brazil has had a combative approach to dealing with criticism and considers criticism of the Judges as an attack to the institution they represent (I'm not exaggerating). So to protect the "democratic institutions" several accounts got banned, people got fined and arrested.
In January 8th 2023, several people went to the city capital (Brazilia) to protest against the presidential elections which some suspect were heavily fraudulent. People broke windows, police intervened and a little under 1000 people got arrested. Some of them are still jailed to this very day.
This made the repression machine work on full gear.
The censorship continued and the requests for private information and account banning increased every week.
Elon Musk decided to not obey those orders anymore. So the requests for info on the users started to arrive with threats of fines and jail. This made Elon Musk confront the Supreme Court, in special Alexandre de Moraes, in public. Musk denounced the Judge's illegal orders and refused to cooperate.
Earlier this month, August 2024, X announced it had terminated its operations in Brazil so they would not subject themselves to these arbitrary rulings.
The Supreme Court ordered X to have at least one representative in Brazil - basicly they wanted someone they could jail anytime - and Elon Musk said fuck it, we are out.
Starlink assets got seized.
Starlink assets? Yes, Starlink, a complete separate company, got its assets seized by the brazilian government due to its link with Elon Musk. It was clearly a retaliation act. One small issue: the brazilian armed forces and isolated communities rely on starlink for communications in remote places. This would disrupt Defense operations and small communities. A small price to pay for "democracy"
X did not retreat.
Soon after an order was issued with a formal ban of X in Brazil.
The full extent of the ban is:
  1. X.com is banned in Brazil and cannot be accessed by anyone on brazilian territory
  2. The use of VPNs or other technological means to circumvent this ban may result in a fine of around USD$10k a day.
  3. App stores must remove VPN apps from their catalogs
As of today, from around a hour ago, X is inaccessible in Brazil without VPN.
Twitter (X) is one of the main social medias accessed by brazilian, it is particularly popular with urban Millenials. Brazilians are the 6th country in absolute numbers of users on Twitter (X). Twitter was the main platform for outsider candidates to make an impact and reach to the public since they would get close to no money for campaigning and TV ads. In Brazil there Mayoral elections will happen in November and this ban literally affects the outcomes by removing one of the main platforms of discussion from the country.
I hope this is a cautionary tale for all of us.
this territory is moderated
As RFK said last week governments are afraid of the truth especially the truth about judges and politicians
@felipe warned us in April!
reply
Censorship is a repressive machine. Centralized social networks are easy prey to these attacks. Nostr, on the other hand, is a decentralized protocol, on which a series of applications and networks are built. It works in Relays that function as nodes where no one can censor you because if you are censored or blocked in a Relay, you have many others where you can continue publishing.
Decentralization is the path to freedom. BTC, Nostr, is the path
reply
One more reason to join NOSTR.
reply
There's a saying we tell each other in times like these here in Brazil:
O Brasil não é para amadores
:/
reply
why is this judge acting this way?
reply
tl;dr: It's a mix of political complications, general culture and fear.
The Supreme Court have too much power right now. And they are using their power to maintain their status.
The political processes needed to remove those judges are very unlikely to happen because the Senators and Deputies fear backlash from the Supreme Court. The Judiciary Power can even seize assets you don't have. Recently a Senator got something around USD$10 million seized by the Justice System. Does he have all that? No. He has something close to a quarter million dollars in assets, but any assets he may eventually receive will be seized immediatelly.
Brazil has more Law Schools than the rest of the world combined and it emits more Law degrees yearly than any other country in the world. Judges, Lawyers, Attorneys, Law operators are highly respected and feared people among the general population.
These power plays (Do you know who you're talking to?) are expected from people in higher positions. This illegal orders look like tuesday to the avegare brazilian: just another powerful player playing with power
reply
Seizing Starlink's assets is an act of economic war.
This will have a chilling effect on further foreign investment in Brazil. A dangerous place to do business now.
reply
It's an act of aggression, for sure. But calling it "an act of economic war" is too much. Stuff get arbitrarily seized all the time, it's not enough to start a war.
reply
Arbitrary seizures of property are also problematic
The people have to remove this judge
reply
Enough to slap retaliatory sanctions on Embraer
reply
It is surprising how censorship continues towards the technological platforms that keep us informed worldwide.
reply
I used to be surprised but not anymore. Look at England and Europe.
reply
Information is not their main activity.. people should use more decentralized technologies that nobody/no company control or make money with it. People tend to go to the same place, i see here a good opportunity to try alternatives!
reply
So, with a VPN you can use X (Twitter) but you're subject to fines. How easy is it for the government to figure out that you're using a VPN?
Can Brazilians use Tor to access X?
And really, the Brazilian government is going to ban VPNs completely - that sounds like it'll have a lot of other consequences as well. I assume the app stores will just take VPNs apps down as requested, for Brazil?
Also...I gotta get serious about starting with Nostr again.
reply
I assume the app stores will just take VPNs apps down as requested, for Brazil?
Yes, and cucks who use iOS will even be affected.
reply
You could use a VPN, yes. But in case your PC or smartphone gets seized by the government, you are in trouble. Other than that, it is very difficult for the government to track VPN usage. You would need to be under investigation and the government would request your browsing history to your Internet Provider. I think Tor would be the safe option, but I'm not sure.
The main app stores hide VPN apps from their catalog if your IP is from Brazil.
But would you go for the trouble of using VPN if most people you followed are not there anymore? Most will not. People are trying Threads (ew) and Bluesky (lesser ew) and Mastodon.
The biggest issue normies found was the loss of community in a known platform that has been used for more than a decade.
reply
good question about Tor and X
Nostr is a good option but it doesn't have the reach of X
reply
Thank god we have nostr now, what a better way to promote it?
reply
how to sell nostr to normies?
reply
we don't sell it to them, they will come to nostr because it will be the last one standing after govts block all centralized platforms.
reply
my brother in Christ, people are using Threads....
reply
had no idea what that is...I'm into foss only
reply
37 sats \ 5 replies \ @OT 30 Aug
How did they seize starlink assets? They took customers dongles? I don't think they're able to seize the actual satellites.
reply
totally illegal because Starlink is owned by Space X
X and Space X are different companies
It's like seizing Tesla assets
reply
They seized starlink's financial assets that were under the custody of brazilian banks.
Starlink can't expand their operations in Brazil because they have no money to pay for stuff and have no hopes of ever having their money back.
I have no info on whether or not their customers are being serviced, I think they are, but I can't confirm.
reply
The courts will likely revoke Starlink's broadcast license next, making it illegal for customers to transmit within Brazilian territory.
reply
Starlink is free while they have no bank account
reply
The bank accounts in Brazil
reply
I guess so
reply