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New X Court Filing Says It’s Complying with Brazil’s Orders to Block Accounts


X’s struggles in Brazil got this update from the Guardian Wednesday:

In a statement tweeted from X’s global government affairs account, the company said the restoration of service was an “inadvertent and temporary” side-effect of switching network providers.

But Friday “After defying court orders in Brazil for three weeks, Mr. Musk’s social network, X, has capitulated,” writes the New York Times. “In a court filing on Friday night, the company’s lawyers said that X had complied with orders from Brazil’s Supreme Court in the hopes that the court would lift a block on its site.”

“The company’s lawyers said X had complied with the court’s orders — blocking designated accounts, paying fines, and naming a new formal representative in the country,” writes TechCrunch (citing reporting by the New York Times):

In a filing of its own, the Supreme Court reportedly responded by telling X it had not provided the proper paperwork and giving it five days to do so….

X came back online in Brazil earlier this week, although Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince told TechCrunch that the timing of the company’s recent switch to Cloudflare infrastructure is just a “coincidence.” During the ban, Brazilian users sought out social media alternatives, leading to dramatic growth at Bluesky and Tumblr.

The New York Times believes “The moment showed how, in the yearslong power struggle between tech giants and nation-states, governments have been able to keep the upper hand.”

Although I’m curious about that missing paperwork…

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