Social platform was blocked after tech billionaire failed to name local
representatives and pay fines
Brazilians are set to regain access to X after a supreme court judge lifted a
ban introduced nearly six weeks ago as a result of Elon Musk’s failure to comply
with the South American country’s laws.
X was blocked in Brazil, where it had more than 22 million users, at the end of
August in what was the culmination of a months-long arm wrestle between the
network’s billionaire owner and the Brazilian supreme court.
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Tag - Americas
Many fear the arrival of tech giants such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google in the
state of Querétaro will place too much of a strain on scarce water and
electricity resources
In a nondescript building in an industrial park in central Mexico, cavernous
rooms hold stack after stack of servers studded with blue lights, humming with
computations and cooled by thousands of little fans and large vents blasting
great columns of air across the room.
“Datacentres are the lungs of digital life,” says Amet Novillo, the managing
director of Equinix Mexico, a digital infrastructure company, as he stands in
the middle of the airflows that stop the hardware overheating.
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The platform agrees to appoint a legal representative in Brazil, pays fines and
takes down user accounts that the court had ordered removed
Elon Musk fought the law. The law appears to have won.
X, Musk’s social media platform, has backed down in its fight with the Brazilian
judiciary, after complying with court orders that had blocked users in the
country from accessing X.
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Justice Alexandre de Moraes imposes $900,000 daily fine on banned social media
platform in dispute with Elon Musk
In the latest round of the dispute between Elon Musk and Brazil’s top court, a
senior judge has accused X of a “willful, illegal and persistent” effort to
circumvent a court-ordered block – and imposed a fine of R$5m ($921,676) for
each day the social network remains online.
The social media platform formerly known as Twitter, which has been banned by
court order since 30 August, on Wednesday became accessible to many users in
Brazil after an update that used cloud services offered by third parties, such
as Cloudflare, Fastly and Edgeuno.
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Satellite internet service’s antennas are everywhere, from illegal mining sites
to isolated Indigenous villages
The helicopter swooped into one of the most inaccessible corners of the Amazon
rainforest. Brazilian special forces commandos leaped from its metal skids into
the caiman-inhabited waters below.
Their target, lurking in the woodland along Brazil’s Bóia River, was a hulking
steel mining dredge, caught red-handed as it drilled into the riverbed,
pulverising it in search of gold.
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Millions of users shut out and 500,000 switch to rival platform Bluesky as
providers enact supreme court ban
One of the world’s most popular social networks, X, has gone offline in Brazil –
the country with the fifth largest digital population – after Elon Musk’s
refusal to comply with local laws saw it blocked by the supreme court.
Millions of Brazilian X users found themselves unable to access the network on
Saturday morning as internet providers and mobile phone companies began to
enforce the ban.
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Social media platform to be blocked by ISPs because it did not appoint legal
representative in allotted time
The Brazilian supreme court has ordered that X be suspended in the country after
the social media platform failed to meet a deadline to appoint a legal
representative in the country.
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”.
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Journalists are using artificial intelligence avatars to combat Maduro’s media
crackdown since disputed election
The Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez, who spent some of his
happiest years chronicling life in Caracas, once declared journalism “the best
job in the world”.
Not so if you are reporting on today’s Venezuela, where journalists are feeling
the heat as the South American country lurches towards full-blown dictatorship
under President Nicolás Maduro.
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Judge Alexandre de Moraes had ordered X to block certain accounts as he
investigated fake news and hate messages
Elon Musk announced on Saturday that the social media platform X would close its
operations in Brazil “effective immediately” due to what it called “censorship
orders” from the Brazilian judge Alexandre de Moraes.
X claims Moraes secretly threatened one of its legal representatives in the
South American country with arrest if it did not comply with legal orders to
take down some content from its platform. Brazil’s supreme court, where Moraes
has a seat, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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As demand for the tin ore cassiterite soars, special forces units of Brazil’s
Ibama environment agency must play a cat and mouse game with the thousands of
illegal miners pouring into Yanomami reserves
In the back yard of the federal police headquarters in Roraima, the northernmost
state of Brazil, giant sacks lie strewn and overflowing with a jet-black,
gravel-like mineral: cassiterite. Although less high-profile than other items
seized during a crackdown on illegal mining in this Amazon state – including a
Sikorsky S-76 helicopter painted in the colours of the Brazilian flag –
cassiterite has become so sought-after that it is nicknamed “black gold”.
Cassiterite is the chief ore of tin, a less heralded but critical mineral for
the energy transition. It is used in coatings for solar panels, lithium-ion
batteries and solder for electronics, including wind turbines, mobile phones,
computers and industrial alloys.
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